Veering
from
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Veer \Veer\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Veered}; p. pr. & vb. n.
{Veering}.] [F. virer (cf. Sp. virar, birar), LL. virare;
perhaps fr. L. vibrare to brandish, vibrate (cf. {Vibrate});
or cf. L. viriae armlets, bracelets, viriola a little
bracelet (cf. {Ferrule}). Cf. {Environ}.]
To change direction; to turn; to shift; as, wind veers to the
west or north. "His veering gait." --Wordsworth.
[1913 Webster]
And as he leads, the following navy veers. --Dryden.
[1913 Webster]
an ordinary community which is hostile or friendly as
passion or as interest may veer about. --Burke.
[1913 Webster]
{To veer and haul} (Naut.), to vary the course or direction;
-- said of the wind, which veers aft and hauls forward.
The wind is also said to veer when it shifts with the sun.
[1913 Webster]
from
Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
83 Moby Thesaurus words for "veering":
aberrant, aberrative, broken, capricious, careening, catchy,
choppy, circuitous, departing, desultory, deviant, deviating,
deviative, deviatory, devious, digressive, disconnected,
discontinuous, discursive, eccentric, errant, erratic, excursive,
fitful, flickering, fluctuating, guttering, halting, herky-jerky,
heteroclite, immethodical, inconstant, indirect, intermittent,
intermitting, irregular, jerky, labyrinthine, lurching, mazy,
meandering, nonuniform, out-of-the-way, patchy, planetary,
rambling, rough, roving, scrappy, serpentine, shifting, snaky,
snatchy, spasmatic, spasmic, spasmodic, spastic, sporadic, spotty,
staggering, stray, swerving, turning, twisting, uncertain,
undirected, unequal, uneven, unmethodical, unmetrical, unregular,
unrhythmical, unsettled, unsteady, unsystematic, vagrant, variable,
wandering, wavering, winding, wobbling, wobbly, zigzag
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