Watching the market gyrate because of events overseas has given him the jitters.
From the delawareonline.com
Reflexively, you flail your hands and gyrate your torso to regain your balance.
From the blogs.psychcentral.com
Stocks continue to gyrate wildly on the slightest rumor of more troubles in Europe.
From the forbes.com
Praise dancers, while spirited, don't gyrate like typical nightclub patrons.
From the thestate.com
Rumors about Jobs'health caused Apple's stock to gyrate earlier this week.
From the sacbee.com
What signals should investors pay attention to as financial markets gyrate?
From the businessweek.com
They quiver in the breeze, gyrate really, and it's all rather bacchanalian.
From the washingtonpost.com
Hewlett and Packard, they continued to gyrate wildly into odd business that no one wants.
From the techcrunch.com
You still might feel queasy when markets gyrate, but that's the point.
From the online.wsj.com
More examples
To wind or move in a spiral course; "the muscles and nerves of his fine drawn body were coiling for action"; "black smoke coiling up into the sky"; "the young people gyrated on the dance floor"
Spin: revolve quickly and repeatedly around one's own axis; "The dervishes whirl around and around without getting dizzy"
(gyration) rotation: a single complete turn (axial or orbital); "the plane made three rotations before it crashed"; "the revolution of the earth about the sun takes one year"
(gyration) the act of rotating in a circle or spiral
A gyrus (pl. gyri) is a ridge on the cerebral cortex. It is generally surrounded by one or more sulci.
(Gyration) In geometry, a gyration is a type of rotation.
To revolve round a central point; to move spirally about an axis, as a tornado; to revolve; Having coils or convolutions
(Gyration) a term used in plasma research for the circular motion of ions and electrons around magnetic field lines.
Means that a cupola on the solid in question has been rotated so that different edges match up, as in the difference between ortho- and gyrobicupola.