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Definition of see-saw verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

see-saw

verb
 
/ˈsiː sɔː/
 
/ˈsiː sɔː/
(especially British English)
(also seesaw especially in North American English)
[intransitive]
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they see-saw
 
/ˈsiː sɔː/
 
/ˈsiː sɔː/
he / she / it see-saws
 
/ˈsiː sɔːz/
 
/ˈsiː sɔːz/
past simple see-sawed
 
/ˈsiː sɔːd/
 
/ˈsiː sɔːd/
past participle see-sawed
 
/ˈsiː sɔːd/
 
/ˈsiː sɔːd/
-ing form see-sawing
 
/ˈsiː sɔːɪŋ/
 
/ˈsiː sɔːɪŋ/
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  1. see-saw (from A to B) to keep changing from one situation, opinion, emotion, etc. to another and back again
    • Her emotions see-sawed from anger to fear.
    • Share prices see-sawed all day.
    Topics Opinion and argumentc2
    Word Originmid 17th cent. (originally used by sawyers as a rhythmical refrain): reduplication of the verb saw (symbolic of the sawing motion).
See see-saw in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary

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