The act of turning aside suddenly.
Turn sharply; change direction abruptly.
Синонимы
Examples for "cut "
Examples for "cut "
1 Julian Barnes: 'Do you expect Europe to cut us a good deal?
2 That study, which was published last year, used standard Crispr cut - and - paste technology.
3 Olmert cut short a visit to Europe on Wednesday and returned home.
4 The job cut will likely affect mainly foreign plants, the paper said.
5 Results: Radiologically, these three second tumors were clearly cut - end scar area recurrences.
1 Today the state continued its downward trend , recording just 15 new cases.
2 Residential rezoning several weeks ago means this trend is sure to continue.
3 Quite why there is a rising trend in serious violence remains unknown.
4 The trend , however, is probably dangerous from a publishing point of view.
5 Here's another example: a new trend on Flickr called the long portrait.
1 That proved impossible given the sheer scale of the private residential market.
2 Perhaps, by sheer nerve and animal cunning, you'll survive for a year.
3 Today, BGI still claims to lead the world in sheer sequencing capacity.
4 The sheer amount of power she must have used was staggering .
5 But the sheer number of cases is causing delays in the courts.
1 The legislature, however, is about 40 years behind this particular technology curve .
2 Throughout the coronavirus crisis, the government has been constantly behind the curve .
3 When that yield curve flattens, however, it signals concern about future activity.
4 The German curve is at its flattest since the global financial crisis.
5 That is an even weaker rates path than UK money market curve .
1 A slew of recent research points to the need for urgent action.
2 A slew of guidebooks that set a new standard for quality followed.
3 The Central Statistics Office unleashed a slew of economic data this week.
4 A slew of products now address the problem-butthey don't come cheap.
5 A slew of large issues is in the pipeline for this year.
1 However, your sense of style may well veer from your normal taste.
2 Once she got far enough ahead, she could veer into a store.
3 The ship commenced to veer off into the path of the cyclone.
4 For the second time, the maggots veer round and retrace their steps.
5 This caused the price to veer away from that on other exchanges.
1 We spent seven days in and out of that slue .
2 Pull port, back starboard, and slue the boat round with her nose toward them.
3 Then Marigold and I will slue this one round, and then we'll send him a tow.
4 All dose I seed, honey-des ' es slue - footed
5 De ve'y idee er dem slue - footed Yankees er shellin' our town an' scerin' all our ladies ter death.
An erratic deflection from an intended course.
1 You and Rex Power Systems, you forced my car into a swerve !
2 He managed to swerve out of the lorry's path just in time.
3 The impediment made the car swerve and it ran into a lamp-post.
4 He came right at me and didn't attempt to slow or swerve .
5 But thanks to the Stanford experience there is still scope to swerve .
6 The mistake was trying to swerve back onto the road at forty.
7 Suddenly she felt the taxi swerve left to pass a slow-moving car.
8 I jerked awake as I felt the bus swerve out of control.
9 He jerked at the reins, causing the horses to start and swerve .
10 The thing that Rubin's book does is swerve past the ooooh shiny-new!
11 A burst of shots from the canal again forced them to swerve .
12 Peter tried to swerve , lost control, and landed hard on his butt.
13 Seek not to deceive me, nor swerve from the paths of truth.
14 He could walk or run any length of pipe and never swerve .
15 He didn't attempt to rein in the horses or to swerve away.
16 She loved one and all with a fidelity that did not swerve .
Other examples for "swerve"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
About this term Verb
Indicative · Present
Swerve across language varieties