What's the difference between juggle and juggler?

Juggle


Definition:

  • (v. i.) To play tricks by sleight of hand; to cause amusement and sport by tricks of skill; to conjure.
  • (v. i.) To practice artifice or imposture.
  • (v. t.) To deceive by trick or artifice.
  • (n.) A trick by sleight of hand.
  • (n.) An imposture; a deception.
  • (n.) A block of timber cut to a length, either in the round or split.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Cooled by a floor fan, nurses, doctors and support staff in blue scrubs move through the small anteroom next to the isolation ward to juggle the needs of the desperately ill patients inside as a stream of people knock on the canvas door asking for updates on their loved ones.
  • (2) The low cost of childcare, generous parental leave and the absence of a long-hours culture has meant that juggling a work-family balance is as much an issue for fathers as mothers in many Danish families.
  • (3) And despite her approachability, interviewers know not to ask her how she juggles everything.
  • (4) Juggling maintaining a high-quality blog or YouTube channel with student life can be tough, so you need to be constantly on top of deadlines and emails.
  • (5) I am expert in navigating the systems, on clawing my way to some work and juggling the admin to stay in that work.
  • (6) A part-time mum working in Centrelink or Medicare faces the loss of rights that allow her to juggle work with her family life; her job security is under threat and all for a cut in her pay packet.
  • (7) As employed women juggle the responsibilities of employment and family caregiving, many experience stress and fatigue from the competing demands on their time and energy.
  • (8) Similarly: Don't use your toaster as a bathtub toy, don't juggle live hand grenades and never put salt in your eyes .
  • (9) Luis Suarez will not be allowed to do his juggling seal routine at the Nou Camp, on account of him being banned and all that .
  • (10) Over in Atlanta, Georgia, Jaha Dukureh, a 24-year-old woman originally from the Gambia, was juggling a full-time job in a bank with motherhood.
  • (11) And that will no doubt please the leadership, which has to juggle rigorous internal policy debate (sometimes disagreement) with the challenges of striking deals with the Conservatives on every government action.
  • (12) As any graduate will remember, those years at university were just as much about juggling a melee of friendships as it was about studying.
  • (13) My husband went to the doctor the other day and a two-minute drive took 35 minutes.” Across the street, Aileen Brown at Eyhorne osteopathic clinic has been juggling cancellations and stranded staff for the past six weeks.
  • (14) Jeong, who worked as a doctor before switching to acting, will play a brilliant but insensitive doc juggling work and family life.
  • (15) Such juggling of information demands that the critical care nurse be alert to the subtle changes occurring within the patient, thereby allowing sound decisions based on astute nursing assessment.
  • (16) But I've heard Evan play changes in his own way just the same (on Monk tunes in a tribute to Steve Lacy for example) and develop a kind of parallel, rhythmically related and appropriately phrased line that isn't juggling the related notes of the chords, but is a fascinating interpretation of the original theme in its own way.
  • (17) Barry Glendenning juggles a ball and transfer tittle-tattle as he prepares to sit in the Big D-Day Chair.
  • (18) This week, Victoria was chatting backstage about the "huge juggling act" of working motherhood, and singing the praises of her trompe l'oeil skirt-and-shirt dresses: "It's great to have something that you can just stand in, zip up and go."
  • (19) Photograph: Sky Sports 8) Spurs to show which league they really want to win When the draw was made for the Europa League last 16 and Spurs were pitted against Borussia Dortmund, Rémi Garde could have been forgiven for thinking that his Aston Villa side may have faced a slightly weakened Tottenham Hotspur team as Mauricio Pochettino juggled the demands of a testing European tie and a Premier League title challenge.
  • (20) A s if juggling the chairing of this year's MediaGuardian Edinburgh international television festival , becoming a mother and editing ITV News during a general election year were not enough, Deborah Turness is also considering joining a dance troupe.

Juggler


Definition:

  • (n.) One who practices or exhibits tricks by sleight of hand; one skilled in legerdemain; a conjurer.
  • (n.) A deceiver; a cheat.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Despite the heightened buzz, Charlotte Square Gardens is still an oasis of August calm, especially if you want to escape the Royal Mile's flyerers, jugglers and student Shakespearoes.
  • (2) With his schoolboyish, ginger hair and glasses, he looks just how you might expect a mathematician to look - in fact, he is a juggler, too.
  • (3) Covent Garden has long been home to a diverse collection of living statues and fairground freaks, a levitating shaman competing with unicycling jugglers and motionless men in their silver-painted suits.
  • (4) The roentgen-anatomical study of the cervical portion of the vertebral column (fluorography and roentgenography in 2 projections followed by morphometrical treatment) was performed in 603 representatives of different professions: turners, milling-machine operators, craftsmen, mechanicians, jugglers, engineers and constructors.
  • (5) A key variable in cascade juggling is the proportion of time that a juggler holds onto a juggled object during a hand cycle, that is, the time from catch to throw in relation to the time from catch to catch.
  • (6) But they were far outnumbered by a playful, peaceful, harmless group of protesters, including rappers, sax-players, jugglers, spliff-rollers, students, CND campaigners, passers-by, and men dressed as police officers and wearing blue lipstick.
  • (7) It turns out that, with a language, jugglers have been able to discover tricks that had eluded them for thousands of years.
  • (8) "In English the equivalent word is 'juggler', but in Italy they juggled with words, irony and sarcasm," says Fo, who has attended Grillo's shows for years.
  • (9) There were no musical numbers nor were there any jugglers, although Trump certainly tap danced around addressing any substantive issues of policy.
  • (10) Ask anyone who has had the good fortune to hold season tickets at the Bernabeu stadium these past six years and they will tell you that Roberto Carlos is as fancy a ball juggler as any they have seen.
  • (11) The doctor tries to clear her head before the next act: a little juggler.
  • (12) It makes for quite a weird green room, though: the character comics in one corner with their bags of props; the standups (late, pretending to drink); a juggler from Bhutan looking lost.
  • (13) Thrives on challenges Hunt thrives on challenges – she's "a juggler", says Lorraine Heggessey, the BBC1 controller until 2005.
  • (14) Alain is a talented juggler, a skill he heartily demonstrates before digging around in the boot for a small plywood guitar.