Totter in a sentence as a verb

And if the teeter totter shows he is as light as a duck, burn the denialist !

It's always a teeter totter, trade one thing for something else, but we lose something as well.

I think I like to go all in on things and so I feel like this chronic teeter-totter is going to be my life for a while.

Fast forward to the present, the teeter totter has tipped, the situation has reversed, side effects far outweigh getting what you need to survive.

I have no choice in the business, and can no more resist this tendency of my mind than I could prevent my body from beginning to totter and decay.

Flash and chrome have always played teeter-totter with utility and functionality, in every field.

The "teeter-totter" thought experiment on that page is interesting to me in that it seems to illustrate how the future has more possibilities than the past.

It makes sense, setting a high price on carbon is like lowering one end of the teeter totter vs raising the other for everything listed - the same thing just spelled out different ways.

Going to a CC I got the feeling that any professors who weren't fresh out of their own education who taught there were those who'd lost their passion and were happy to just totter along until retirement.

Libraryism is the sinister flipside to Not-Invented-Here Syndrome, the same kind of conceptual teeter-totter as arguments around thin vs. thick clients.

It's very convenient to build your knowledge on the fulcrum of every community teeter-totter, the sheet-metal of every bike-shed, the fundamental logic from which all abstractions are born and all abstractions can be decomposed.

I think in Xerox, they were called "toner heads".When you suck out the soul, the remaining carcass will totter on for a couple more decades, and encomiums will be written to the "well-managed" company in business magazines, but no promising undergraduates will list it as their dream job, and somehow, that's what really matters.

Totter definitions

verb

move without being stable, as if threatening to fall; "The drunk man tottered over to our table"

verb

walk unsteadily; "small children toddle"

See also: toddle coggle dodder paddle waddle

verb

move unsteadily, with a rocking motion

See also: teeter seesaw