0 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: --
1 to succeed in arranging your life so that you have time to involve yourself in two or more different activities or groups of people: --
2 to change results or information recorded as numbers so that a situation seems to be better than it really is: --
3 to throw several objects into the air, catch them, and keep them moving so that at least one is always in the air: --
4 to try to do two or more jobs or activities at the same time, because you do not have a lot of time: --
5 if you juggle data or resources, you use them in a way that will bring you an advantage or that may be dishonest: --
The community interpreter has to be able to juggle this kind of information all the time.
Indeed, the main mechanism by which working carers juggle work and care seems to be to provide relatively few hours of care.
How can extensive practice involving full vision result in the ability to juggle with eyes closed?
When family commitments had required, they had been able to juggle their freelance assignments to fit.
Employed adolescents may learn to better manage their time as they juggle the multiple activities of worker, student, friend, and family member.
More usually, we are left trying to juggle between the two: periods where we have a lot of detail interspersed with period of silence.
Each object juggled may be very different - indeed the more different the better the juggling - but each is in the end only an object thrown up and caught in turn.
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.