1. maneuvering - Noun
2. maneuvering - Verb
of Manoeuvre
Source: Webster's dictionaryMarriage is indeed a maneuvering business. Jane Austen
Politicians are always realistically maneuvering for the next election. They are obsolete as fundamental problem-solvers. Buckminster Fuller
Gods, all this maneuvering for moral advantage. You'd think we were married. Scott Lynch
I used to think Cape Wind was a great idea. That was when Ted Kennedy was alive and railing about how he might spill his Chivas if he had to keep maneuvering the Mya around all those noisy seagull-murdering wind turbines. Anything Ted Kennedy was against, I was for. Howie Carr
I enjoyed the administrative work because it involved working with Congress, city council, and the mayor. I had never been a politician so it was fun - learning political maneuvering. Harold H. Greene
Historians often do not mention the truly important features of daily life, like games, concentrating instead on tedious political maneuvering. Underwood Dudley