Originally Posted by Nickhead:
he had four turnovers, and lost two, dumbass :-)
Originally Posted by :
turn·o·ver
/ˈtərnˌōvər/
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noun
noun: turnover; plural noun: turnovers
1.
the amount of money taken by a business in a particular period.
"a turnover approaching $4 million"
Similar:
(gross) revenue
income
yield
volume of business
business
sales
2.
the rate at which employees leave a workforce and are replaced.
Similar:
rate of replacement
coming and going
change
movement
the rate at which goods are sold and replaced in a store.
Similar:
throughput
rate of buying and selling
movement
3.
a small pie made by folding a piece of pastry over on itself to enclose a sweet filling.
"an apple turnover" 4.
NORTH AMERICAN
(in a game) a loss of possession of the ball to the opposing team.
You can’t have a turnover without a loss of possession to the opposing team. A fumble isn’t a turnover unless the other team recovers it. [Reply]
a turnover is when you give the opponent a chance to recover the ball.
in basketball, if a player passes it to another, and the opponent gets it, then turns it over again, to the opponent, then its still a turnover, without it being a turnover :-) [Reply]
Originally Posted by Nickhead:
a turnover is when you give the opponent a chance to recover the ball.
in basketball, if a player passes it to another, and the opponent gets it, then turns it over again, to the opponent, then its still a turnover, without it being a turnover :-)
The definition says otherwise.
See how you mentioned the changes of possession? That’s what determines a turnover. The stats would show two turnovers in the scenario you described. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Nickhead:
a turnover is when you give the opponent a chance to recover the ball.
in basketball, if a player passes it to another, and the opponent gets it, then turns it over again, to the opponent, then its still a turnover, without it being a turnover :-)
This whole thing is comoletely wrong. You're trolling. Lucky I don't report your ass. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Nickhead:
a turnover is when you give the opponent a chance to recover the ball.
in basketball, if a player passes it to another, and the opponent gets it, then turns it over again, to the opponent, then its still a turnover, without it being a turnover :-)
So if someone resigns from your company because he needs water but is then convinced to stay as the company offers him water, does he get counted in the staff turnover figure? [Reply]