swinging
IPA: swˈɪŋɪŋ
noun
- The act or motion of that which swings.
- An activity where couples engage in sexual activity with different partners, often in a group setting.
adjective
- (informal) Fine, good, successful.
- Sexually promiscuous.
- Alternative form of swingeing [(chiefly Britain) Huge, immense.]
Advertisement
Examples of "swinging" in Sentences
- The flag was swinging all night.
- The soldiers are marching, swinging their arms.
- The quality of the article is swinging back and forward.
- The ensembles behind the soloists are swinging, and not in the way.
- For the week's gig, Elling included material on current CD release, The Gate -- as in, he points out, the phrase "swinging on..."
- It is anchored to the top of a 500-year-old, 250-foot Douglas fir, a tree that travelers can scale and spend the night in swinging from a hammock.
- Where else can you find skateboarding dogs and crack smoking prostitutes, the Wiggles and Sadam Hussein swinging from a rope, all in one convenient location?
- Avidius, using what he called the swinging lever principle, applied his heaviest pressure to one flank and thus compressed it back, creating congestion and making it difficult for the Parthians to have any kind of cohesive control.
- Feeding her always buys me about 10-15 minutes, so I went for that route since changing her diaper means I have to do that, then feed her for 10 minutes to get her to quiet down and nod off enough to set her back down in her big comfy chair that's what we call her swinging chair.
Advertisement
Advertisement