0 to try to do several things at once, when it is difficult to have enough time -- godzić
1 to keep two or more objects such as balls in the air by throwing them repeatedly, usually in order to entertain people -- żonglować
The figures which are used in this report could be juggled in varying ways.
She had to manage with what little her husband gave her and juggling this budget gave her many headaches.
The buffoon is better equipped to handle dissimilar elements, as if he were a jester, juggling life and art, or the comic and the serious.
When juggling two radical theories with a commitment to addressing issues important in psychology, something has got to give.
Another is that unless juggled with surprising grace, themes will sometimes drop out of sight.
Four males wheeled out prams to sound effects of screaming babies, and in a very funny act, juggled crying babies on short sticks.
Poetical mimesis is dismissed as "juggling play", but still refuted and disputed as seriously as a matter of life and death.
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.
中文繁体
娛樂, (用…)玩雜耍, 應付…
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娱乐, (用…)玩杂耍, 应付…
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hacer juegos malabares, compaginar, hacer malabarismos…
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fazer malabarismo…
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~をジャグリングする, (仕事、時間など)をやりくりする…
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yeterli zaman olmadığında aynı anda bir çok şey yapmaya çalışmak, hokkabazlık yapmak…
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jongler, jongler (avec)…
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fer jocs malabars, compaginar…
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