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:
Incidentally, such an average will hit hardest those colliery concerns which have refused to resort to trickery and have not juggled with minimum prices.
We all know how the figure for unemployment was juggled about until it came down.
We all know that figures and percentages can be juggled.
These figures are juggled with, sophisticated, gerrymandered, so as to produce a totally false impression.
Targets appear to have been juggled a bit and those of us who were already confused are more confused than we were.
Should the regulations provide that all those factors be juggled in one combination or another?
None of the local authorities that have been juggled about knew what would happen to them.
The words have been juggled around a little, but they are absolutely identical.