1. spiking - Noun
2. spiking - Verb
of Spike
Source: Webster's dictionaryAccording to monitoring site DownDetector, user-reported YouTube problems began spiking at around 7 p.m. ET. Source: Internet
BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) — The number of new COVID-19 cases is spiking in parts of Eastern Europe, with Hungary and the Czech Republic registering all-time highs. Source: Internet
After George Floyd’s death at the hands of Minneapolis police sparked nationwide protests and unrest, Tennessee Republicans stirred more outrage locally by spiking a resolution this week for Ashanti Nikole Posey, a Black teen shot and killed this year. Source: Internet
And with Covid-19 cases spiking this month, Biden’s advisers say controlling the pandemic is more urgent than ever. Source: Internet
A running tab of offenses would include, but certainly wouldn't be limited to, scorching temperatures, social and political unrest, spiking COVID cases, a brewing hurricane season, and a Taylor Swift record no one asked for. Source: Internet
And he went on a long, improvised riff about his administration’s production of ventilators as he downplayed concerns about the coronavirus even as the country exceeded 90,000 new cases a day, with hospitalizations spiking. Source: Internet