0 past simple and past participle of juggle
1 to throw several objects up into the air, and then catch and throw them up repeatedly so that one or more stays in the air, usually in order to entertain people:
2 to succeed in arranging your life so that you have time to involve yourself in two or more different activities or groups of people:
3 to change results or information recorded as numbers so that a situation seems to be better than it really is:
Four males wheeled out prams to sound effects of screaming babies, and in a very funny act, juggled crying babies on short sticks.
Another is that unless juggled with surprising grace, themes will sometimes drop out of sight.
The play has no resolution; answers are striven for but never reached; dilemmas, political and philosophical systems, moral and literary judgements are juggled about in a kaleidoscopic display.
Var. 2, for example, is well described as 'simple tonal "cubism" whereby the key relationships are all juggled'.
Overwhelmed social workers juggled unmanageable caseloads.
It is astonishing how, in the course of the many sittings we have had, you have juggled the various aspects of this difficult material.
The already overstretched budget has been juggled, and money has been taken from contingency funds.
The words have been juggled around a little, but they are absolutely identical.