sway



sway back and forth

to swing or bend from one direction to another. The pendulum swayed back and forth, counting off the seconds. Mary was swaying back and forth, keeping time to the music.
See also: and, back, forth, sway

sway from side to side

to swing or bend from one side to the other. The car swayed from side to side as we started out, indicating that something was seriously wrong. He swayed from side to side with the rhythm of the music.
See also: side, sway

sway someone to something

to convince someone to do something. I think I can sway her to join our side. We could not sway Ted to our position.
See also: sway

hold sway

1. to control Each group that held sway over a particular strip of the Mississippi River controlled who used it.
2. to have great influence Ten years after she correctly predicted the crash, she still holds sway among stock brokers.
See also: hold, sway

hold sway over

Dominate, have a controlling influence over, as in He held sway over the entire department. This idiom uses the noun sway in the sense of "power" or "dominion," a usage dating from the late 1500s.
See also: hold, sway

hold sway

To have a controlling influence; dominate.
See also: hold, sway

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
Patime-Uyghur
Widogast-Ancient Germanic
CullenKUL-ənEnglish
CletisKLEE-tisEnglish (Rare)
Erasmo-Italian, Spanish, Portuguese
IwanEE-wan (Welsh), EE-vahn (Polish)Welsh, Polish