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- MANOEUVRE | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
MANOEUVRE definition: 1 a movement or set of movements needing skill and care: 2 a planned and controlled movement or… Learn more
- Maneuver vs. manoeuvre - GRAMMARIST
In American English, maneuver is the standard spelling of the word referring to (among other things) a controlled change in movement or direction Manoeuvre is the preferred spelling throughout the rest of the English-speaking world Maneuver and manoeuvre are pronounced the same, and they share all their definitions
- MANOEUVRE Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of MANOEUVRE is chiefly British spelling of maneuver
- MANOEUVRE definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
If you manoeuvre something into or out of an awkward position, you skilfully move it there We attempted to manoeuvre the canoe closer to him [VERB noun adverb preposition] I manoeuvred my way among the tables to the back corner of the place The pilot instinctively maneuvered to avoid them [VERB]
- manoeuvre noun - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes . . .
Definition of manoeuvre noun from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary [countable] a movement performed with care and skill You will be asked to perform some standard manoeuvres during your driving test The pilot has to carry out a series of complex manoeuvres
- Manoeuvre - definition of manoeuvre by The Free Dictionary
1 a contrived, complicated, and possibly deceptive plan or action: political manoeuvres 3 (Military) 4 (Aeronautics) a planned movement of an aircraft in flight 5 (Nautical Terms) any change from the straight steady course of a ship 7 (intr) to manipulate situations, etc, in order to gain some end: to manoeuvre for the leadership 9
- MANOEUVRE Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com
Manoeuvre definition: a variant of maneuver See examples of MANOEUVRE used in a sentence
- manoeuvre | maneuver, v. meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English . . .
To perform a manoeuvre or manoeuvres; to make tactical or strategic movements or changes of position in the disposition of troops, vessels, etc Also transitive with it as object Washington will manœuvre it with him a good deal to avoid it
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