veer
verb /vɪə(r)/
/vɪr/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they veer | /vɪə(r)/ /vɪr/ |
he / she / it veers | /vɪəz/ /vɪrz/ |
past simple veered | /vɪəd/ /vɪrd/ |
past participle veered | /vɪəd/ /vɪrd/ |
-ing form veering | /ˈvɪərɪŋ/ /ˈvɪrɪŋ/ |
- [intransitive] + adv./prep. (especially of a vehicle) to change direction suddenly synonym swerve
- The bus veered onto the wrong side of the road.
- It is still not clear why the missile veered off course.
Extra ExamplesTopics Transport by car or lorryc2- He veered left towards them.
- The car veered off the road.
- The missile veered wildly off course.
- The path veers sharply to the right.
- The plane veered away to the left.
- The ship veered round wildly in the rough sea.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- sharply
- wildly
- (to the) left
- …
- between
- from
- off
- …
- veer close to something
- [intransitive] + adv./prep. (of a conversation or way of behaving or thinking) to change in the way it develops
- The debate veered away from the main topic of discussion.
- His emotions veered between fear and anger.
Extra Examples- The play veers from loopy comedy to serious moralizing.
- His poetry veered dangerously close to sentimentalism.
- He veered between the extremes of optimism and pessimism.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- sharply
- wildly
- (to the) left
- …
- between
- from
- off
- …
- veer close to something
- [intransitive] + adv./prep. (specialist) (of the wind) to change direction
- The wind veered to the west.
Word Originlate 16th cent.: from French virer, perhaps from an alteration of Latin gyrare, from Greek guros ‘a ring’.