We have no meanings for "difficult balancing" in our records yet.
1 We foreigners have some difficult balancing to do, to escape a fall.
2 He stood up, unzipped his pants, and began a difficult balancing act.
3 Immigration minister Iain Lees-Galloway said it was a difficult balancing act.
4 It was a difficult balancing act, which bequeathed enduring tensions.
5 To achieve both can be a difficult balancing act.
6 That will mean a difficult balancing act for Obama.
7 It's a very difficult balancing act to get them right, so it does take a while.
8 The Reserve Bank faces a difficult balancing act when it reviews the Official Cash Rate today.
9 Mr Obama faced a difficult balancing act.
10 May has faced a difficult balancing act.
11 That is proving a difficult balancing act.
12 But he has a difficult balancing act.
13 But it is a difficult balancing act.
14 It will be a very difficult balancing act, said one Labour MP, shortly before Darling addressed the House.
15 This was a difficult balancing act because as an EU leader he was obligated to represent its interests.
16 It's been a difficult balancing act.
Other examples for "difficult balancing"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: Difficult balancing through the time