to juggle (with)

  • 11juggle — verb 1 (I, T) to keep three or more objects moving through the air by throwing and catching them very quickly (+ with): juggling with plates 2 (I, T) if you juggle two or more jobs, activities etc, you try to fit all of them into your life:… …

    Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • 12juggle eggs — v. Performing a complex or difficult mental task which can t be interrupted for fear of losing the train of thought. Example Citation: When he furrows his brow and places his arm straight with the palm facing forward out as though to ward off any …

    New words

  • 13juggle — verb Juggle is used with these nouns as the object: ↑demand, ↑responsibility, ↑schedule …

    Collocations dictionary

  • 14juggle — v. & n. v. 1 a intr. (often foll. by with) perform feats of dexterity, esp. by tossing objects in the air and catching them, keeping several in the air at the same time. b tr. perform such feats with. 2 tr. continue to deal with (several… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 15juggle — verb 1) juggling three part time jobs Syn: handle, manage, deal with, multitask 2) the auditors suspect that the books had been juggled Syn: tamper with, manipulate, falsify, alter, rig; informal fudge, fix …

    Thesaurus of popular words

  • 16juggle — Synonyms and related words: adulterate, alter, arrange, bamboozle, beguile, betray, bluff, cajole, cheat on, circumvent, conjure, cook, delude, diddle, distort, doctor, double cross, dupe, fake, falsify, fix, forestall, gammon, get around, gull,… …

    Moby Thesaurus

  • 17juggle frogs —    If you are juggling frogs, you are trying to do something very difficult.   (Dorking School Dictionary)    ***    A person who is juggling frogs is trying to deal with many different tasks at the tame time and finding the situation difficult.… …

    English Idioms & idiomatic expressions

  • 18juggle —    obsolete    to copulate    If Shakespeare was running true to form, punning on the play with balls:     She and the Dauphin have been juggling. (1 Henry VI) …

    How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms

  • 19juggle — verb 1》 continuously toss into the air and catch a number of objects so as to keep at least one in the air at any time. 2》 cope with by adroitly balancing (several activities). 3》 misrepresent (facts). noun an act of juggling. Derivatives juggler …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 20juggle — v 1. fake, alter, change, tamper with, Inf. doctor, Inf. cook; maneuver, manipulate, fix, rig; load, pack, stack, stack the deck; salt, salt the mine, Sl. plant. 2. delude, deceive, mislead, beguile, dupe, trick, hoax, humbug, take in, put [s.t.] …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder