turn in
verbDefinitions
To submit something
To submit something; to give.
- He turned in his paperwork to the main office.
- The actors turned in a formulaic performance.
To relinquish
To relinquish; give up; to tell on someone to the authorities (especially to turn someone in).
- The thief finally turned himself in at the police station.
- My nosy next-door neighbor turned me in for building my garage without a permit.
To go to bed
To go to bed; to retire to bed.
- I'm tired, so I think I'll turn in early tonight.
›+ 2 more definitionsshow fewer
To convert a goal using a turning motion of the body.
- At that point Leicester were playing with drive and ambition but they were undone by two goals in three minutes. First, Vieira turned in a rebound after the defender Souleymane Bamba had blocked David Silva's shot on the line.
To reverse the ends of threads and insert them back into the piece being woven so they do…
To reverse the ends of threads and insert them back into the piece being woven so they do not protrude and eventually unravel.
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for turn in. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA