Turning in a sentence as a noun

"FB is turning a blind eye to keep their revenue" seems to stand up to Occam's Razor.

Harvard was created by Wasps and now it was benefitting Jews and turning more Jewish.

Down the hall from me were several men in their mid-eighties who were drawing $1MM+ pensions and turning up for work two days a week.

So, Google had a pipe dream about turning carriers into dumb pipes, and had to face reality when the carriers wouldn't let them.

Most of the time when we screw up it's by not inviting a group to interviews, rather than by interviewing them and turning them down.

The fact is you can get a number of low cost electrical locks from China today that have reliable turning mechanisms.

Shouting about the 'nanny state' and using bitcoin, and then turning around and looking for a nanny to help him out when he goes around it is pathetic.

The same goes for most of the political changes we associate with modernity and progress - with the notable exception of Bevan and his peers, the people turning the wheels were mainly minor aristocrats in dusty tweed.

When the US Government was forcing telecom by telecom to install taps into their business's core routing hubs Joseph Nacchio, the CEO at the time, dug his heels in demanding legal avenues to avoid turning his back on QWest's customers.

Turning definitions

noun

the act of changing or reversing the direction of the course; "he took a turn to the right"

See also: turn

noun

act of changing in practice or custom; "the law took many turnings over the years"

noun

a shaving created when something is produced by turning it on a lathe

noun

a movement in a new direction; "the turning of the wind"

See also: turn

noun

the end-product created by shaping something on a lathe

noun

the activity of shaping something on a lathe