Определение turn arounds в Английский Язык Английский Язык словарь
- plural form of turn around
- turn around
- Annoyingly repetitive or consistent
Every time you turn around the price of milk has gone up again.
- turn around
- To consider from a different viewpoint
Let's turn that around and look at it from another angle.
- turn around
- To physically rotate horizontally 360 degrees
Turn around once or twice so I can see your new dress.
- turn around
- Alternative spelling of turnaround
- turn around
- To reverse the expected outcome of a game, usually from a losing position to a winning one
They were way ahead but the game turned around on them and they lost 4-3.
- turn around
- To be duplicitous
You can't just turn around and say that it was all my fault.
- turn around
- To reverse a trend, usually towards a more favorable outcome; to return (a business, department) to effectiveness, profitability, etc
The new management team has really turned the company around and they expect a good profit next year.
- turn around
- To effect a positive reversal of a trend
Let's turn this around 180 degrees and enjoy the rest of our vacation.
- turn around
- To change to the opposite direction from a previous position
She turned her position around and now she is in favor of the merger.
- turn around
- To produce; to output; to generate''
We can turn around 500 units by next week.
- turn around
- To make a situation worse by trying to make it better
They turned it around 360 degrees and now they're losing even more money.
- turn around
- If something such as a business or economy turns around, or if someone turns it around, it becomes successful, after being unsuccessful for a period of time. Turning the company around won't be easy In his long career at BP, Horton turned around two entire divisions If the economy turned round the Prime Minister's authority would quickly increase
- turn around
- cause to get better; "The new stategy turned around sales"; "The tutor turned around my son's performance in math"
- turn around
- turn abruptly and face the other way, either physically or metaphorically; "He turned around to face his opponent"; "My conscience told me to turn around before I made a mistake"
- turn around
- cause to get better; "The new stategy turned around sales"; "The tutor turned around my son's performance in math
- turn around
- If you turn something around, or if it turns around, it is moved so that it faces the opposite direction. Bud turned the truck around, and started back for Dalton Pond He had reached over to turn round a bottle of champagne so that the label didn't show There was enough room for a wheelchair to get in but not to turn round
- turn around
- If you turn around a question, sentence, or idea, you change the way in which it is expressed, in order to consider it differently. Now turn the question around and start looking not for what you did wrong in the past, but for what you can do to make things better in the future It's an example of how you can turn around the sentence and create a whole new meaning. see also turnaround
- turn around
- If you say that someone turns around and says something, you are indicating that they say it unexpectedly or angrily, especially in order to criticize another person or to defend themselves. I feel that if I say how tired I get, David will turn around and say, `I told you so'
- turn around
- see turn 1
- turn around
- get better; "Her performance in school picked up"
- turn around
- turning in an opposite direction or position; "the reversal of the image in the lens"