gravitating 的定义
grav·i·tat·ed, grav·i·tat·ing.
- to move or tend to move under the influence of gravitational force.
- to tend toward the lowest level; sink; fall.
- to have a natural tendency or be strongly attracted: Musicians gravitate toward one another.
gravitating 近义词
be drawn toward; fall to
更多gravitating例句
- Walters had gravitated during law school to apply to firms because she was worried about paying off student loans.
- Younger folks are driving the trend, gravitating toward smaller camper vans and vehicles under 30 feet long.
- It helps that when consumers are worried about the health of themselves and their families, they gravitate toward brands they know.
- Over time, many of these startups gravitate toward a setup where the bulk of R&D remains in Europe, but all the executives, the go-to market teams, and the CEO become based there.
- I suspect there are two reasons athletes originally have gravitated to gaiters.
- They are gravitating away from more established contemporary painters like Subodh Gupta.
- But even knowing that, the public is quickly gravitating toward interactive social networks and devices like Twitter.
- A further decline in American influence in the Gulf will automatically lead to oil-rich Arab states gravitating towards Tehran.
- One may say a gravitating solar system is already prophesied in the nature of Newton's mind.
- During this time he was slowly gravitating towards the life of a student of science.
- The world came to admire the two splendid stars gently gravitating towards each other in the musical firmament of the Opera House.
- She found herself naturally gravitating over to see Beatrice.
- Universal equilibrium of gravitating particles would have been indestructible by internal causes.