Need another word that means the same as “juggle”? Find 14 synonyms and 30 related words for “juggle” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
The synonyms of “Juggle” are: beguile, hoodwink, misrepresent, tamper with, falsify, misstate, distort, change round, alter, manipulate, rig, massage, fudge, juggling
Juggle as a Noun
Definitions of "Juggle" as a noun
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “juggle” as a noun can have the following definitions:
- An act of juggling.
- The act of rearranging things to give a misleading impression.
- Throwing and catching several objects simultaneously.
Synonyms of "Juggle" as a noun (1 Word)
juggling | Throwing and catching several objects simultaneously. |
Juggle as a Verb
Definitions of "Juggle" as a verb
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “juggle” as a verb can have the following definitions:
- Deal with simultaneously.
- Manipulate by or as if by moving around components.
- Continuously toss into the air and catch (a number of objects) so as to keep at least one in the air while handling the others.
- Influence by slyness.
- Throw, catch, and keep in the air several things simultaneously.
- Cope with by adroitly balancing (several activities.
- Hold with difficulty and balance insecurely.
- Organize (information or figures) in order to give a particular impression.
Synonyms of "Juggle" as a verb (13 Words)
alter | Make an alteration to. Eliot was persuaded to alter the passage. |
beguile | Charm or enchant (someone), often in a deceptive way. To beguile some of the time they went to the cinema. |
change round | Give to, and receive from, one another. |
distort | Affect as in thought or feeling. The pipe will distort as you bend it. |
falsify | Falsify knowingly. Falsify the data. |
fudge | Tamper, with the purpose of deception. The authorities have fudged the issue. |
hoodwink | Conceal one’s true motives from especially by elaborately feigning good intentions so as to gain an end. Staff were hoodwinked into thinking the cucumber was a sawn off shotgun. |
manipulate | Manipulate in a fraudulent manner. He manipulated the dials of the set. |
massage | Give a massage to. She massaged his sore back. |
misrepresent | Give a false or misleading account of the nature of. This statement misrepresents my intentions. |
misstate | State something incorrectly. To say that he was alone misstates the case. |
rig | Provide a sailing boat with sails and rigging. Rig an election. |
tamper with | Play around with or alter or falsify, usually secretively or dishonestly. |
Usage Examples of "Juggle" as a verb
- She works full time, juggling her career with raising children.
- Defence chiefs juggled the figures on bomb tests.
- Juggle an account so as to hide a deficit.
- Charles juggled five tangerines, his hands a frantic blur.
- The average first-time buyer spends many hours juggling figures as they try to budget for their first home.
- The player juggled the ball.
- She had to juggle her job and her children.
- He can't juggle.
Associations of "Juggle" (30 Words)
acrobat | An entertainer who performs spectacular gymnastic feats. |
amusement | A feeling of delight at being entertained. On the promenade the amusements were still open. |
artist | A person skilled at a particular task or occupation. A surgeon who is an artist with the scalpel. |
ball | In baseball a pitch delivered outside the strike zone which the batter does not attempt to hit. A cricket ball. |
buffoon | A person who amuses others by ridiculous behavior. |
carnival | A frenetic disorganized (and often comic) disturbance suggestive of a large public entertainment. A carnival parade. |
cast | A mould used to make an object by casting. I had to spend a month in a cast. |
circus | A rounded open space in a town or city where several streets converge. The children always love to go to the circus. |
clown | Act as or like a clown. A circus clown. |
comedian | An entertainer on stage or television whose act is designed to make an audience laugh. They sat watching an Irish comedian telling jokes. |
dance | Dance steps and movements considered as an activity or art form. Midges danced over the stream. |
entertainment | The action of providing or being provided with amusement or enjoyment. A theatrical entertainment. |
festival | An organized series of concerts, plays, or films, typically one held annually in the same place. A drama festival. |
firework | A device with an explosive that burns at a low rate and with colored flames; can be used to illuminate areas or send signals etc. A firework display. |
gymnast | A person trained or skilled in gymnastics. |
juggling | The act of rearranging things to give a misleading impression. |
masquerade | Take part in a masquerade. I doubt he could have kept up the masquerade for long. |
mime | A practitioner of mime or a performer in a mime. They ve even mimed in a restaurant hall. |
pantomime | An absurd or confused situation. They pantomimed picking up dropped food. |
parade | A parade ground. She parades her new husband around town. |
perform | Perform a function. We performed a popular Gilbert and Sullivan opera. |
prankster | Someone who plays practical jokes on others. |
props | Proper respect. Certain sectors of the music fraternity still refuse to give him props. |
roller | A small wheel without spokes as on a roller skate. Further coats can be applied by brush or roller. |
sideshow | A minor show that is part of a larger one (as at the circus. Asylum seeking in the west is a damaging and distracting sideshow. |
stunt | Perform a stunt or stunts. Some weeds produce chemicals that stunt the plant s growth. |
toss | An act or instance of tossing something. A defiant toss of her head. |
trapeze | A horizontal bar hanging by two ropes and free to swing, used by acrobats in a circus. |
tumbler | Pigeon that executes backward somersaults in flight or on the ground. |
vaudeville | A variety show with songs and comic acts etc. His comedic roots are in vaudeville. |