0 present participle of corner
1 If a vehicle corners well, badly, etc., it drives around corners in the stated way:
2 to force a person or an animal into a place or situation from which they cannot easily escape:
Again, this is physically reasonable, since during travel on high-traction terrain the available cornering force is greater than on lowtraction terrain.
It is possible to analyse other environments by identifying the corridor width and evaluating the cornering required.
That is my recollection—that he had not been able to discover any attempt at cornering.
What punishment do you suggest for those who are cornering cement?
We have no evidence that there was any cornering of supplies.
It has been suggested in some quarters that this may result in a tendency to cornering and manipulation of the industry.
What we are faced with now is the result of speculation, cornering, and—to use the modern word which too many politicians like to use—stockpiling.
I am not aware of any "cornering" of the tea market, nor of any consumers being unable to purchase their ration.