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flailing
[fley-ling]
noun
the act of moving one’s limbs or body about randomly and wildly (often followed by around orabout ).
The patient had to be sedated, as her flailing gave the nurse a bloody nose.
the act or process of making desperate attempts to respond to a difficult or awkward situation (often followed by around orabout ).
Embracing the challenge of doing business differently doesn't just mean more effort, more mindless flailing around.
the act or process of beating grain with a flail to separate the kernel from the chaff.
As wheat production increased, flailing and winnowing were replaced with threshing machines and fanning mills.
adjective
moving about randomly and wildly, or making desperate attempts to respond to a challenge.
I was pushed out of bed by the flailing limbs of my overexcited little boy.
There was no real strike, only a flailing protest by unions trying to become relevant again.
Word History and Origins
Origin of flailing1
Example Sentences
Many of the tales of their early endeavors — including a 1936 test that ended with an oxygen line catching fire, creating, essentially, a flailing flame thrower — are now told in hyperbole, MacDonald noted.
“Hal and Harper are just flailing,” says Raiff, who initially insisted to friends the show was not autobiographical, saying, “This is not my life.”
That’s why we need to share anything that captures them flailing around as much as possible.
And then he doesn’t get the response he wants and runs out flailing, like a toad that finally got turned back into a man?
Menendez said he had no plan at the time, there was just “a lot of flailing in what was happening.”
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