Definify.com
Definition 2024
turn_over
turn over
See also: turnover
English
Verb
turn over (third-person singular simple present turns over, present participle turning over, simple past and past participle turned over)
- Used other than as an idiom: see turn, over.
- To flip over; to rotate uppermost to bottom.
- Turn over the box and look at the bottom.
- (transitive, idiomatic) To relinquish; give back.
- They turned over the evidence to the authorities.
- (transitive, idiomatic) To transfer.
- 1843, Thomas Carlyle, Past and Present, book 3, ch. IX, Working Aristocracy
- But what is to be done with our manufacturing population […] This one thing, of doing for them by ‘underselling all people,’ and filling our own bursten pockets and appetites by the road; and turning over all care for any ‘population,’ or human or divine consideration except cash only, to the winds, with a “Laissez-faire” and the rest of it: this is evidently not the thing.
- 1843, Thomas Carlyle, Past and Present, book 3, ch. IX, Working Aristocracy
- (transitive, idiomatic) To produce, complete, or cycle through.
- They can turn over about three hundred units per hour.
- (transitive) To mull, ponder
- 1883, Howard Pyle, The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood Chapter V
- Thus they dwelled for nearly a year, and in that time Robin Hood often turned over in his mind many means of making an even score with the Sheriff
- 1883, Howard Pyle, The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood Chapter V
- (transitive, intransitive) To spin the crankshaft of an internal combustion engine using the starter or hand crank in an attempt to make it run.
- (transitive, sports) To give up control (of the ball and thus the ability to score).
- The Giants didn't turn the ball over in their last four games.
Translations
literally
to flip over
|
to relinquish
|
to transfer — see transfer