switch
Americannoun
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a turning, shifting, or changing.
After the scandal there was a dramatic switch of votes to another candidate.
- Synonyms:
- alternation, shift, change
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a slender growing shoot, as of a plant.
A forked willow switch can supposedly be used to find water underground.
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a slender, flexible shoot, rod, etc., used especially as a whip, as for corporal punishment.
Discipline there was done by means of a switch.
She would take a switch to the ox, but never more severely than to get its attention.
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a stroke, lash, or whisking movement, with or as if with a slender, flexible rod or shoot.
She was interrupted by a switch in the face from a tree branch.
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Electricity. a device for turning on or off or directing an electric current or for making or breaking a circuit.
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Computers.
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a device connecting others in a network, enabling communication among them by interrogating each received data packet for its source and destination and then routing it to the appropriate device in the network.
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Also called switch statement. (in a program or piece of code) a structure permitting a number of different actions as determined by the value of a particular expression.
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Also called command-line switch. an argument sent to a program when it is run from the command line rather than via a graphical user interface, and which modifies the function of the command.
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Railroads. a track structure for diverting moving trains or rolling stock from one track to another, commonly consisting of a pair of movable rails.
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Bridge. a change to a suit other than the one played or bid previously.
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Basketball. a maneuver in which two teammates on defense shift assignments so that each guards the opponent usually guarded by the other.
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a hairpiece consisting of a bunch or tress of long hair or some substitute, fastened together at one end and worn by women to supplement their own hair.
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a tuft of hair at the end of the tail of some animals, as of the cow or lion.
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Slang.
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(especially in BDSM) a person who is willing to take either a dominant or a submissive role in a sexual relationship.
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(in the LGBTQ community) a person who is willing to take either a penetrative or a receptive role in a particular sexual act, especially anal intercourse.
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verb (used with object)
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to shift or exchange.
The two girls switched their lunch boxes.
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to turn, shift, or divert.
to switch conversation from a painful subject.
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Electricity. to connect, disconnect, or redirect (an electric circuit or the device it serves) by operating a switch (often followed by off oron ).
I switched on a light.
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Railroads.
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to move or transfer (a train, car, etc.) from one set of tracks to another.
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to drop or add (cars) or to make up (a train).
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Movies, Television. to shift rapidly from one camera to another in order to change camera angles or shots.
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to whip or beat with a switch or the like; lash.
He switched the boy with a cane.
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to move, swing, or whisk (a cane, a fishing line, etc.) with a swift, lashing stroke.
verb (used without object)
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to change direction or course; turn, shift, or change.
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to exchange or replace something with another.
He still eats a lot of potato chips, but he's switched to a brand that's lower in salt.
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to make a stroke or strokes with or as with a switch.
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to move or sway back and forth, as a cat's tail.
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to be shifted, turned, etc., by means of a switch.
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Basketball. to execute a switch.
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Bridge. to lead a card of a suit different from the suit just led by oneself or one's partner.
idioms
noun
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a mechanical, electrical, electronic, or optical device for opening or closing a circuit or for diverting energy from one part of a circuit to another
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a swift and usually sudden shift or change
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an exchange or swap
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a flexible rod or twig, used esp for punishment
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the sharp movement or blow of such an instrument
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a tress of false hair used to give added length or bulk to a woman's own hairstyle
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the tassel-like tip of the tail of cattle and certain other animals
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any of various card games in which the suit is changed during play
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a railway siding
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a railway point
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informal See switchboard
verb
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to shift, change, turn aside, or change the direction of (something)
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to exchange (places); replace (something by something else)
the battalions switched fronts
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to transfer (rolling stock) from one railway track to another
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(tr) to cause (an electric current) to start or stop flowing or to change its path by operating a switch
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to swing or cause to swing, esp back and forth
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(tr) to lash or whip with or as if with a switch
Other Word Forms
Etymology
Origin of switch
First recorded in 1585–95; earlier swits, switz “slender riding whip, flexible stick”; compare Low German (Hanoverian) schwutsche “long, thin stick”
Explanation
If you and your friend are seated separately on an airplane, you can always ask a stranger if they will switch seats with you. To switch is to change or exchange. Switch can be a noun or verb, and in most cases it has the meaning of change. You can switch classes, political parties, or the radio station. Sometimes if you switch something with someone, they take yours and you take theirs — as in an exchange or trade. However, there is one unrelated and frightening meaning for the word. In the olden days, a form of punishment was to be hit with a thin, flexible, piece of wood called a switch.
Vocabulary lists containing switch
Engineering - Introductory
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Electricity and Magnetism - Introductory
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Physics - Introductory
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Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
You could switch to a hybrid long-term-care and life-insurance policy, although you will end up paying much higher premiums than you are paying now.
From MarketWatch • May 6, 2026
Assuming nothing changes, companies’ first chance to switch to semiannual reporting will come the next time they file an annual report.
From Barron's • May 5, 2026
A slightly greater share of workers also voluntarily quit their jobs in March – a sign that more people were finding opportunities to switch to a new role.
From The Wall Street Journal • May 5, 2026
“I don’t really know when the switch happened.”
From Los Angeles Times • May 4, 2026
“We’ll switch him to wet food and see if that makes a difference. You know, your dad’s right, Mira.”
From "Sir Fig Newton and the Science of Persistence" by Sonja Thomas
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.