| whirl | | |
| commotion, whirl | (n.) | confused movement.; "he was caught up in a whirl of work"; "a commotion of people fought for the exits" |
| convolution, swirl, vortex, whirl | (n.) | the shape of something rotating rapidly. |
| crack, fling, go, offer, pass, whirl | (n.) | a usually brief attempt.; "he took a crack at it"; "I gave it a whirl" |
| spin, twirl, twist, twisting, whirl | (n.) | the act of rotating rapidly.; "he gave the crank a spin"; "it broke off after much twisting" |
| swirl, twiddle, twirl, whirl | (v.) | turn in a twisting or spinning motion.; "The leaves swirled in the autumn wind" |
| birl, spin, twirl, whirl | (v.) | cause to spin.; "spin a coin" |
| eddy, purl, swirl, whirl, whirlpool | (v.) | flow in a circular current, of liquids. |
| gyrate, reel, spin, spin around, whirl | (v.) | revolve quickly and repeatedly around one's own axis.; "The dervishes whirl around and around without getting dizzy" |
| tumble, whirl, whirl around | (v.) | fly around.; "The clothes tumbled in the dryer"; "rising smoke whirled in the air" |
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