1. lurching - Noun
2. lurching - Verb
of Lurch
Source: Webster's dictionaryChina has lunged into the 21st century, while India is still lurching toward it. Steven Rattner
GOP last tracks have been lurching in wrong direction. Big thanks to ol' POTUS who is working so hard to make the midterms all about him and his epic racist madness. Mike Murphy (political consultant)
As we weather the storm, lurching from the whitecapped swell of one crisis to the next, there’s a growing fear that Europe doesn’t know how to steer towards safe harbour. Source: Internet
As the condition progresses, walking is characterized by a widened base and high stepping, as well as staggering and lurching from side to side. Source: Internet
It’s a spare song, with a honey-slow breakbeat coming in after the halfway point to give the track a lurching oomph. Source: Internet
Someone comments on a swimmer’s floundering butterfly, which doesn’t have the graceful rise and fall of the others we see but rather looks like a constant lurching and collapsing into the water. Source: Internet