It's a colloquialism and it's a reference to boxing. Between rounds, each fighter goes to their respective corner of the ring. Swinging refers to throwing punches. It basically just means you're feeling charged up and ready to take something on.
odysseus, of course, the man of twists and turns
a boy swinging a bat is a third class lever
Grandfather's clock has a swinging part called a, "Pendulum". (PEN dyoo-lumm)
-- its length (from the pivot to the center of mass of the swinging part) -- the local acceleration of gravity in the place where the pendulum is swinging
kinetic energy and potential kinetic energy decrease because a) the air is resisting the swinging item, so the item needs more energy (that it doesn't have) to continue swinging at its starting speed; and b) gravity is pulling it towards the earth. gravity is stronger than the small amount of energy put into the swinging item.
Come Out Swinging was created in 2001-04.
It depends on what you mean by 'swinging'. If you mean partner-swapping among married adults, the answer is no. If you mean 'having an innate sense of rhythm': it does happen regularly, but many people also have a great sense of rhythm while their parents had not - and the other way around. If you mean swinging among the tree-tops like a monkey, the answer is no for humans, but yes for monkeys.
I'm swinging / I'm losing balance
To Flail means to move around in swinging, or waving (usually awkward) motions.He's moving his arms in crazy, awkward, swinging motions.
It's swinging (ie going well)
The corner. (As in the corner or the desk, book, or a street corner)
The term could mean lively, but it is often used to mean the practice of swapping sexual partners.
soon to happen -- "impending doom" is misfortune that is, so to speak, just around the corner
swinging from trees swinging from trees swinging from trees
FROM A DUMB CORNER IN SAN PEDRO FROM A DUMB CORNER IN SAN PEDRO FROM A DUMB CORNER IN SAN PEDRO
adjectives swinging girl
A haymaker is fighting term that means a hard, swinging punch or hit. It comes from how hay used to be harvested, which was by swinging a scythe, since the punch resembles the same motion and level of power.