lurchlɜrtʃ
lurch (v)
- present
- lurches
- past
- lurched
- past participle
- lurched
- present participle
- lurching
lurch (n)
English Definitions:
lurch, stumble, stagger (noun)
an unsteady uneven gait
lurch (noun)
a decisive defeat in a game (especially in cribbage)
lurch, pitch, pitching (noun)
abrupt up-and-down motion (as caused by a ship or other conveyance)
"the pitching and tossing was quite exciting"
lurch, lunge (verb)
the act of moving forward suddenly
stagger, reel, keel, lurch, swag, careen (verb)
walk as if unable to control one's movements
"The drunken man staggered into the room"
lurch, pitch, shift (verb)
move abruptly
"The ship suddenly lurched to the left"
lurch (verb)
move slowly and unsteadily
"The truck lurched down the road"
prowl, lurch (verb)
loiter about, with no apparent aim
lurch, skunk (verb)
defeat by a lurch
lurch (Noun)
A sudden or unsteady movement.
lurch (Verb)
To make such a sudden, unsteady movement.
LURCH
LURCH is a tool for software design debugging that uses a nondeterministic algorithm to quickly explore the reachable states of a software model. By performing a partial and random search, LURCH looks for faults in the model and reports the pathways leading to the faults.
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"lurch." Kamus.net. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 23 Apr. 2024. <https://www.kamus.net/english/lurch>.
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