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revolving
/ rɪˈvɒlvɪŋ /
adjective
- moving around a central axis
revolving door
- (of a fund) constantly added to from income from its investments to offset outgoing payments
- (of a letter of credit, load, etc) available to be repeatedly drawn on by the beneficiary provided that a specified amount is never exceeded
Derived Forms
- reˈvolvingly, adverb
Other Words From
- re·volving·ly adverb
- nonre·volving adjective
- unre·volving adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of revolving1
Example Sentences
One of the barristers representing sub-postmasters pointed to the problems caused by this “revolving door of ministers”, as he listed the eight business secretaries in the last five years alone.
Here, though, “Stimmung,” a complex series of short sections revolving around “magic names” found throughout world cultures, became a session of healing.
If Trump’s first term is any indicator, the next four years will be an unmitigated mess of infighting, corruption, revolving door staff, facile demands and fragile egotism.
Each series is a cat-and-mouse story, with the hero and the villain identified from the beginning, though exactly who is the cat and who the mouse is an evolving, revolving situation.
The revolving door of White House administrations and cable news channels has been active in recent years due to the number of opinion programs the outlets now present.
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