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“trending”
trend (verb), trends; trended; trending
1. To change or to develop in a general direction: The unemployment rate has been trending upward.
2. To bend or to turn away in a specified course: The Severn River trends toward Lake Ontario.
3. To show a tendency or movement toward something or in a particular way: Public opinion is trending against being involved in another war.
2. To bend or to turn away in a specified course: The Severn River trends toward Lake Ontario.
3. To show a tendency or movement toward something or in a particular way: Public opinion is trending against being involved in another war.
Unemployed people have trended toward frustration and hopelessness because they can't find a way to take care of themselves financially.
4. To extend, to incline, or to veer in a specified course: The prevailing wind in the weather forecast trends toward the east.According to some people, the gender gap seems to be trending down.
5. Etymology: "to run" or "to bend in a certain direction"; developed from Middle English trenden, "roll around, turn, revolve"; found in Old English trendan, related to trinda, trinde, "round lump, ball", and trendel, "circle, ring, disk"; derived from the same word in the ancestral language of Old Frisian trind, trund, "round"; then Middle Low German trendel, "disk, spinning top" which is Trendel in modern German.
This entry is located in the following unit:
English Words in Action, Group T
(page 6)