Need another word that means the same as “rotate”? Find 31 synonyms and 30 related words for “rotate” in this overview.
The synonyms of “Rotate” are: go around, revolve, circumvolve, splay, spread out, turn out, go round, turn, turn round, move round, spin, gyrate, wheel, whirl, twirl, swivel, circle, pirouette, pivot, reel, alternate, take turns, take it in turns, act in sequence, work in sequence, trade places, change, switch, interchange, exchange, swap
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “rotate” as a verb can have the following definitions:
act in sequence | Perform on a stage or theater. |
alternate | Be an understudy or alternate for a role. Bouts of depression alternate with periods of elation. |
change | Exchange or replace with another usually of the same kind or category. We had to change at Rugby. |
circle | Move in circles. We circled round the island. |
circumvolve | Cause to turn on an axis or center. |
exchange | Exchange a penalty for a less severe one. He exchanged a concerned glance with Stephen. |
go around | Follow a procedure or take a course. |
go round | Follow a procedure or take a course. |
gyrate | Move or cause to move rapidly in a circle or spiral. The young people gyrated on the dance floor. |
interchange | (of two or more people) exchange (things) with each other. The terms are often interchanged. |
move round | Arouse sympathy or compassion in. |
pirouette | Perform a pirouette. She pirouetted and made a bow. |
pivot | Provide a mechanism with a pivot fix a mechanism on a pivot. The government s reaction pivoted on the response of the Prime Minister. |
reel | Bring in a fish attached to a line by turning a reel and winding in the line. The alcohol made my head reel. |
revolve | Cause to move by turning over or in a circular manner of as if on an axis. The earth revolves around the sun. |
spin | Cause to spin. The President s spokesmen had to spin the story to make it less embarrassing. |
splay | Thrust or spread (things, especially limbs or fingers) out and apart. The river splayed out deepening to become an estuary. |
spread out | Spread out or open from a closed or folded state. |
swap | Substitute (one thing) for another. I was wondering if you d like to swap with me. |
switch | Beat or flick with or as if with a switch. Switch on the light. |
swivel | Turn around a point or axis or on a swivel. He swivelled in the chair. |
take it in turns | Take by force. |
take turns | Occupy or take on. |
trade places | Do business; offer for sale as for one’s livelihood. |
turn | Cause to change or turn into something different assume new characteristics. I turned the key in the door and crept in. |
turn out | Let (something) fall or spill from a container. |
turn round | Move around an axis or a center. |
twirl | Cause to spin. She twirled her fork in the pasta. |
wheel | Move along on or as if on wheels or a wheeled vehicle. Robert wheeled round to see the face of Mr Mafouz. |
whirl | Cause to spin. I whirled her round the dance hall. |
work in sequence | Give a workout to. |
anticlockwise | In the opposite direction to the way in which the hands of a clock move round. An anticlockwise direction. |
circle | Something in the shape of a circle. The lamp spread a circle of light. |
circular | Having a circular shape. The circular motion of the wheel. |
circulate | Cause to be distributed. Blood circulates in my veins. |
convolute | Practice sophistry; change the meaning of or be vague about in order to mislead or deceive. A convolute petal. |
convolution | A method of determination of the sum of two random variables by integration or summation. Crosses adorned with elaborate convolutions. |
convolve | Roll or coil together; entwine. |
counter | A return punch (especially by a boxer. The proposal has become a crucial bargaining counter over prices. |
curve | Form an arch or curve. Her dress twisted tightly round her generous curves. |
flip | Glib or flippant. Flip over the pork chop. |
gyrate | Move or cause to move rapidly in a circle or spiral. Strippers gyrated to rock music on a low stage. |
kink | Form a curl curve or kink. Though the system is making some headway there are still some kinks to iron out. |
oblate | Having the equatorial diameter greater than the polar diameter; being flattened at the poles. |
pinwheel | Something shaped or rotating like a pinwheel. He spun the pinwheel and it stopped with the pointer on Go. |
pivot | Provide a mechanism with a pivot fix a mechanism on a pivot. The government s reaction pivoted on the response of the Prime Minister. |
precession | The act of preceding in time or order or rank (as in a ceremony. |
reel | Bring in a fish attached to a line by turning a reel and winding in the line. The two reeled out of the bar arm in arm. |
revolve | Cause to move by turning over or in a circular manner of as if on an axis. Their whole lives revolved around the company. |
rotary | A rotary machine engine or device. The accident blocked all traffic at the rotary. |
rotation | The act of rotating as if on an axis. It has become common for senior academics to act as heads of department in rotation. |
slew | Of an electronic device undergo slewing. He slewed the aircraft round before it settled on the runway. |
somersault | Do a somersault. His car somersaulted into a ditch. |
spheroid | A solid generated by a half revolution of an ellipse about its major axis prolate spheroid or minor axis oblate spheroid. It looked like a sphere but on closer examination I saw it was really a spheroid. |
spin | Fish with a spinner. Kevin had had a rough spin. |
spiraling | In the shape of a coil. |
statistics | A branch of applied mathematics concerned with the collection and interpretation of quantitative data and the use of probability theory to estimate population parameters. |
swivel | Turn around a point or axis or on a swivel. She swivelled her eyes round. |
turn | Cause to change or turn into something different assume new characteristics. It was his turn to speak. |
whirl | Confused movement. Sybil stood waving as they whirled past. |
wind | Catch the scent of get wind of. Wind players. |
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