1. invert: toss, shift; rotate; swap.
2. mash: to swap or deploy.
Expanded Information
1. 1. to tumble; toss, turn over and reverse. 高云览 《小城春秋》第三一章:"这样倒腾几下,酒气往上冲,一阵恶心,把今晚吃的鱼翅大虾都呕在麻袋里了。" ? Hao Ran's "The Witty Ghost": "He had nothing to say, just to the doctor to say good things, but also put me is a member of the military, attended the communal labor model thing also put out. This kid, what is the relevance of pouring out that game to seeing a doctor?" E.g., his two families are again pouring things in the house.
2. to rotate; to drop. Yang Shuo? Red Rock Mountain: "There were a hundred or so people in the group, and they couldn't sleep. Du Laowu's mind is so smart that he divides the workers into two shifts, day and night, so that one shift comes and the other goes, and all of them live in this house upside down." People's Literature, 1981, No. 9: "Master You was so shocked that he couldn't think of a word to say."
3. It refers to the arrangement and deployment.
3. It refers to the arrangement and deployment. Yangge Opera Selection - Everybody's Good, Scene 1: "If the change of labor team can be poured out, ask them to help you pick up a little."
4. trafficking, buying and selling. Zhou Libo, "Stormy Weather," Part 1, Part 2: "After Han Changbei sold his daughter-in-law, he usually pours out some rags and sells some 馃zi, which is not enough to eat and drink, and even less to buy cigarettes."
5. To operate. Li Yingru? Wildfire Spring Breeze Fighting Ancient City, Chapter 13, 1: "The pseudo-army looked and said, 'What are you doing in the city? 'Pouring a small business.
2, 1. tumbling, moving: to put dung ~ into the ground.
2. To sell, to buy or sell: ~ livestock.
3. to change, to deploy: to be understaffed or overstaffed.
Source: Pouring?