A device for suspending something, such as a ship's compass, so that it will remain level when its support is tipped.
1934, A. E. W. Mason, “The Chronometer,” Chapter II, in Dilemmas, London: Hodder & Stoughton,
He lifted the chronometer off the gimbals on which it was slung in the mahogany case and showed the number engraved upon the bottom.
verb
(transitive) To suspend using a gimbal or gimbals.
1918, Richard Dehan (Clotilde Graves), That Which Hath Wings, New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, Chapter 32,
[…] he conned his course in masterly fashion by aid of the roller-map, protected by its transparent, rainproof casing, or the compass, clock, altimeter, and other instruments gimballed in the wooden frame in front of the pilot’s seat.
(transitive, aerospace) To move a reaction engine about on a gimbal so as to obtain pitching and yawing correction moments.