1. rotate - Adjective
2. rotate - Verb
Having the parts spreading out like a wheel; wheel-shaped; as, a rotate spicule or scale; a rotate corolla, i.e., a monopetalous corolla with a flattish border, and no tube or a very short one.
To turn, as a wheel, round an axis; to revolve.
To perform any act, function, or operation in turn, to hold office in turn; as, to rotate in office.
To cause to turn round or revolve, as a wheel around an axle.
To cause to succeed in turn; esp., to cause to succeed some one, or to be succeeded by some one, in office.
Source: Webster's dictionaryTo rotate on its own axis is not the one movement for the human soul. There is also its wheeling round the Sun of an inexhaustible illumination. Sri Aurobindo
We all live on the same planet, it is our only home, so... we used to rotate crops back in the day and, you know, who cares if you're going to make a profit if everybody's too dead or glowing in the dark to be able to purchase anything. Michael Berryman
If the Earth could be made to rotate twice as fast, managers would get twice as much done. If the Earth could be made to rotate twenty times as fast, everyone else would get twice as much done since all the managers would fly off. Norman Ralph Augustine
One simple way to keep organizations from becoming cancerous might be to rotate all jobs on a regular, frequent and mandatory basis, including the leadership positions. Robert Shea
I actually don't shop very much. I have a tendency to rotate a few pairs of ripped jeans and an old cashmere sweater. Candace Bushnell
A bush that doesn't rotate baskets must not grow mushrooms. African Proverb