shove
31Shove — Shone ist der Familienname folgender Personen: Fredegond Shove (1889–1949), englische Dichterin Gerald Shove (1887–1947), britischer Ökonom Diese Seite ist eine Begriffsklärung zur Unterscheidung mehrerer mit demselben Wort bezeich …
32shove — n. to give smb. a shove * * * [ʃʌv] to give smb. a shove …
33shove — 1. verb 1) she shoved him back into the chair Syn: push, thrust, propel, drive, force, ram, knock, elbow, shoulder; jostle, hustle, manhandle 2) she shoved past him Syn …
34shove — [c]/ʃʌv / (say shuv) verb (shoved, shoving) –verb (t) 1. to move along by force from behind. 2. to push roughly or rudely; jostle. –verb (i) 3. to push. –noun 4. an act of shoving. –phrase 5. shove it, (an expression of dismissal, contempt, etc.) …
35shove — Pahu, kē, hou, kula i, kūna i, kula ilua, onou; ♦ shove away, keku, ho okeku. ♦ Shove ahead, regardless of consequences, onou po o …
36shove — I. verb (shoved; shoving) Etymology: Middle English, from Old English scūfan to thrust away; akin to Old High German scioban to push and probably to Lithuanian skubti to hurry Date: before 12th century transitive verb 1. to push along 2. to push… …
37shove in — phr verb Shove in is used with these nouns as the object: ↑bag …
38shove — 01. The bully [shoved] little Bobby off the chair he was sitting on. 02. People were [shoving] each other, trying to get in line to get tickets to the big rock show. 03. A woman was seriously injured today after being [shoved] in front of a bus… …
39shove — [OE] Shove was originally a perfectly respectable, neutral verb for ‘push forcefully, thrust’, but over the centuries it has come down 455 shy in the world, acquiring connotations of rudeness. In common with German schieben and Dutch schuiven it… …
40shove it — [B] put it away, stick it up your ass, stuff it If that dental plan pays only half the cost, they can shove it …