Maneuver vs Steering - What's the difference?
maneuver | steering |
(en noun) (American spelling)
A movement, often one performed with difficulty.
(often, in the plural) A large training field-exercise of military troops.
An adroit or cunning action; a stratagem.
To move (something) carefully, and often with difficulty, into a certain position.
(figurative) To guide, steer, manage purposefully
(figurative) To intrigue, manipulate, plot, scheme
:: ''The patriarch maneuvered till his offspring occupied countless key posts
Equipment used to control direction; something used to steer.
As nouns the difference between maneuver and steering
is that maneuver is a movement, often one performed with difficulty while steering is equipment used to control direction; something used to steer.As verbs the difference between maneuver and steering
is that maneuver is to move (something) carefully, and often with difficulty, into a certain position while steering is .maneuver
English
Alternative forms
* manoeuvre (Commonwealth) * maneuvre, manoeuver (nonstandard) *Noun
- Parallel parking can be a difficult maneuver .
- The army was on maneuvers .
- Joint NATO maneuvers are as much an exercise in diplomacy as in tactics and logistics.
Verb
(en-verb) (American spelling)steering
English
Verb
(head)Noun
(wikipedia steering) (en noun)- I hit a rock with my car and broke the steering .
