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1 ■ shove over
■ shove overA v. t. + avv.B v. i. + avv. -
2 shove over
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3 shove over
shove over -
4 shove over
VI + ADV correrseshove over! — ¡córrete!
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5 shove over
(colloq)shove over se pousser -
6 shove over
phrvi infmlShove over, I want to sit down — А ну, подвинься, я хочу сесть
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7 shove over
фраз. гл.; разг.1) брит.; = shove up2) опрокидывать, валитьThe boy, running round the corner, nearly shoved the old lady over. — Мальчик, забежав за угол, чуть не сбил с ног пожилую женщину.
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8 shove over
разг. опрокидывать, валить The boy, running round the corner, nearly shoved the old lady over. ≈ Мальчик, забежав за угол, чуть не свалил пожилую женщину.Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > shove over
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9 shove over
опрокидывать, валитьАнгло-русский большой универсальный переводческий словарь > shove over
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10 shove over
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11 shove over
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12 shove over
поместува, се помрднува -
13 shove over a cliff
Макаров: (smb.) столкнуть (кого-л.) с обрыва -
14 to shove over / shove up
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15 to shove over
pavirzīties sānis -
16 shove
shove ○A n to give sb/sth a shove pousser qn/qch ; she gave me a shove in the back elle m'a poussé dans le dos ; the door needs a good shove il faut pousser fort la porte.B vtr1 ( push) pousser (against contre ; towards vers) ; to shove sth through pousser qch dans [letterbox] ; pousser qch par [gap] ; to shove sth about ou around déplacer qch ; to shove sb/sth back repousser qn/qch ; to shove sb/sth aside ou out of the way écarter qn/qch en le poussant ; they shoved him down the stairs/out of the window ils lui ont fait descendre l'escalier en le poussant/l'ont poussé par la fenêtre ; to be shoved into ○ être flanqué ○ dans [room, institution] ; être flanqué ○ à [street] ; to be shoved out of être viré ○ de [building] ; to shove sth in sb's face fourrer ○ qch sous le nez de qn [camera, microphone] ; to shove sth down sb's throat fig imposer qch à qn ;2 (stuff hurriedly, carelessly) fourrer ; to shove sth into fourrer qch dans [container, pocket, room, gap] ; she shoved the clothes back in the drawer elle a remis les vêtements dans le tiroir n'importe comment ;3 (jostle, elbow) bousculer [person] ; to shove (one's way) past sb passer devant qn en le bousculant ; he shoved his way to the front of the crowd il s'est frayé un chemin à travers la foule.C vi pousser ; to shove past sb passer devant qn en le bousculant ; people were pushing and shoving les gens poussaient et se bousculaient.if push comes to shove au pire ; tell him to shove it ◑ ou he can shove it ◑ ! dis-lui qu'il peut se le mettre où je pense ◑ !■ shove off GB1 ○ ( leave) se tirer ○ ; (why don't you) just shove off! tire-toi ○ ! fiche-moi le camp ○ ! ;2 ( in boat) déborder.■ shove over ○:▶ shove over se pousser ;▶ shove [sth] over, shove over [sth] passer [object, foodstuff] ; shove it over here! passe-le moi ○ !■ shove up ○ se pousser. -
17 shove
shove [∫ʌv]1. nounpoussée f• to give sb/sth a shove pousser qn/qch• to shove sth in/out/down faire entrer/sortir/descendre qch en le poussant• to shove sth/sb aside pousser qch/qn de côté• to shove sth into a drawer/one's pocket fourrer qch dans un tiroir/sa poche• to shove sb/sth out of the way écarter qn/qch en le poussant* * *1.(colloq) [ʃʌv] noun2.to give somebody/something a shove — pousser quelqu'un/quelque chose
transitive verb1) ( push) pousserto shove something through — pousser quelque chose dans [letterbox]; pousser quelque chose par [gap]
to shove somebody/something aside — écarter quelqu'un/quelque chose en le poussant
to shove something in somebody's face — fourrer (colloq) quelque chose sous le nez de quelqu'un
to shove something down somebody's throat — fig imposer quelque chose à quelqu'un
2) ( stuff hurriedly) fourrer3) ( jostle) bousculer [person]3.intransitive verb pousserPhrasal Verbs:- shove up••shove off! — (colloq) tire-toi! (colloq)
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18 shove
1. verb(to thrust; to push: I shoved the papers into a drawer; I'm sorry I bumped into you - somebody shoved me; Stop shoving!; He shoved (his way) through the crowd.) empujar
2. noun(a push: He gave the table a shove.) empujónshove1 n empujónshove2 vb empujardon't shove me! ¡no me empujes!tr[ʃʌv]1 empujón nombre masculino1 (push) empujar2 (put casually) meter1 (push) empujar, dar empujones■ don't shove! ¡no empujes!shove n: empujón m, empellón mn.• empellón s.m.• empujón s.m.• envite s.m.• envión s.f.• rempujón s.m.v.• empellar v.• empujar v.• rempujar v.
I
1. ʃʌva) ( push roughly) empujarthey shoved her out of the way — la quitaron de en medio a empellones or a empujones
b) ( put) (colloq) poner*, meter
2.
vi empujareveryone was pushing and shoving — todo el mundo andaba a (los) empujones or a (los) empellones
shove over/up! — (colloq) córrete, hazte a un lado
Phrasal Verbs:
II
noun empujón m, empellón m[ʃʌv]1.N empujón mto give sth/sb a shove — dar un empujón a algo/algn
2. VT1) (=push) empujar•
shove the table back against the wall — empuja la mesa contra la pared•
to shove sth/sb in — meter a algo/algn a empujones•
they shoved the car over the cliff — fueron empujando el coche hasta que cayó por el acantilado2) * (=put) poner, meter3.VI empujar, dar empujonesstop shoving! * — ¡deja de empujar!
* * *
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1. [ʃʌv]a) ( push roughly) empujarthey shoved her out of the way — la quitaron de en medio a empellones or a empujones
b) ( put) (colloq) poner*, meter
2.
vi empujareveryone was pushing and shoving — todo el mundo andaba a (los) empujones or a (los) empellones
shove over/up! — (colloq) córrete, hazte a un lado
Phrasal Verbs:
II
noun empujón m, empellón m -
19 shove
I [ʃʌv]nome colloq.to give sb., sth. a shove — dare una spinta a qcn., qcs
••II 1. [ʃʌv]verbo transitivo colloq.1) (push) spingereto shove sth. in sb.'s face — sbattere qcs. in faccia a qcn.
to shove sth. down sb.'s throat — fig. far ingoiare qcs. a qcn
2) (stuff hurriedly) ficcare, cacciare3) (jostle, elbow) spintonare, sgomitare [ person]2.verbo intransitivo spingere- shove up* * *1. verb(to thrust; to push: I shoved the papers into a drawer; I'm sorry I bumped into you - somebody shoved me; Stop shoving!; He shoved (his way) through the crowd.) spingere2. noun(a push: He gave the table a shove.) spinta* * *[ʃʌv]1. nspintone mto give sb/sth a shove — dare uno spintone a qn/qc
2. vt(gen) spingere, (thrust) cacciare, ficcareto shove in/out etc — spingere dentro/fuori etc
he shoved his fist/stick into my face — mi ha minacciato con il pugno/bastone
3. vi•* * *shove /ʃʌv/n.( anche sport) spinta; urto; spintone: to give sb. a shove, dare una spinta a q. ( anche, fig., per aiutarlo a partire)● (fam.) to get the shove, ricevere il benservito; (fam.) to give sb. the shove, dare il benservito a q. □ (fam.) when push comes to shove ► push.♦ (to) shove /ʃʌv/A v. t.1 spingere; sospingere: The hunted man shoved the furniture against the door, l'uomo braccato spinse i mobili contro la porta2 (fam.) gettare; mettere; cacciare; ficcare: Shove it in the drawer, mettilo nel cassetto; He shoved the money into his pocket, si cacciò i soldi in tascaB v. i.1 spingere; dare spinte; farsi largo a spintoni● (fam.) Shove it!, piantala!; smettila!; va a quel paese! (volg.).* * *I [ʃʌv]nome colloq.to give sb., sth. a shove — dare una spinta a qcn., qcs
••II 1. [ʃʌv]verbo transitivo colloq.1) (push) spingereto shove sth. in sb.'s face — sbattere qcs. in faccia a qcn.
to shove sth. down sb.'s throat — fig. far ingoiare qcs. a qcn
2) (stuff hurriedly) ficcare, cacciare3) (jostle, elbow) spintonare, sgomitare [ person]2.verbo intransitivo spingere- shove up -
20 shove
1. nounStoß, der2. transitive verb1) stoßen; schubsen (ugs.)2) (use force to propel) schieben3) (coll.): (put) tun3. intransitive verbdrängen; drängeln (ugs.)shove through the crowd — (coll.) sich durch die Menge drängeln (ugs.). See also academic.ru/59207/push">push 2. 1), 3. 4)
Phrasal Verbs:* * *1. verb(to thrust; to push: I shoved the papers into a drawer; I'm sorry I bumped into you - somebody shoved me; Stop shoving!; He shoved (his way) through the crowd.) schieben,stoßen2. noun(a push: He gave the table a shove.) der Stoß* * *[ʃʌv]I. n Ruck mto give sth a \shove etw [weg]rückenII. vt1. (push)▪ to \shove sth aside etw beiseiteschieben2. (place)to \shove sth into a bag etw in eine Tasche stecken▪ to \shove sth [down] somewhere etw irgendwohin stellen3.III. vi▪ to \shove along [or over] beiseiterücken* * *[ʃʌv]1. nSchubs( er) m (inf), Stoß mto give sb a shove — jdn schubsen (inf) or stoßen
to give sth a shove — etw rücken; door gegen etw stoßen; ball etw anstoßen; car
one more shove — noch einmal schieben, noch einen Ruck
2. vtstop shoving me — hör auf zu drängeln or mich zu schubsen (inf)
to shove sb against a wall —
to shove sb off the pavement — jdn vom Bürgersteig herunterschubsen (inf), jdn vom Bürgersteig herunterdrängen
2) (infhe shoved his head out of the window — er steckte seinen Kopf aus dem Fenster
3)shove it! (sl) — leck mich! (inf), fick dich! (vulg)
3. vistoßen; (to move sth) schieben; (= jostle) drängeln* * *shove [ʃʌv]A v/t1. (beiseite etc) schieben, stoßen:2. (achtlos oder rasch) schieben, stecken, stopfenB v/i1. schieben, stoßen2. (sich) dränge(l)n3. shove offa) (vom Ufer) abstoßen,b) besonders imp umg abschieben, Leine ziehenC s Stoß m, Schubs m (auch fig):give sb a shove (off) jemandem weiterhelfen* * *1. nounStoß, der2. transitive verb1) stoßen; schubsen (ugs.)2) (use force to propel) schieben3) (coll.): (put) tun3. intransitive verbdrängen; drängeln (ugs.)shove through the crowd — (coll.) sich durch die Menge drängeln (ugs.). See also push 2. 1), 3. 4)
Phrasal Verbs:* * *n.Anstoß -¨e m. v.schieben v.(§ p.,pp.: schob, geschoben)schubsen v.stoßen v.(§ p.,pp.: stieß, gestossen)
См. также в других словарях:
shove over — ˌshove ˈover ˌshove ˈup [intransitive] [present tense I/you/we/they shove over he/she/it shoves over present p … Useful english dictionary
shove over — phrasal verb shove over or shove up [intransitive] Word forms shove over : present tense I/you/we/they shove over he/she/it shoves over present participle shoving over past tense shoved over past participle shoved over British to move in order to … English dictionary
shove over — American to kill Not necessarily involving a cliff but into another state of existence, perhaps: Did you did anybody have any idea that she was gonna get shoved over? (Diehl, 1978) … How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms
shove up — ˌshove ˈover ˌshove ˈup [intransitive] [present tense I/you/we/they shove over he/she/it shoves over … Useful english dictionary
shove up — phrasal verb shove over or shove up [intransitive] Word forms shove over : present tense I/you/we/they shove over he/she/it shoves over present participle shoving over past tense shoved over past participle shoved over British to move in order to … English dictionary
shove — I UK [ʃʌv] / US verb Word forms shove : present tense I/you/we/they shove he/she/it shoves present participle shoving past tense shoved past participle shoved * 1) [intransitive/transitive] to push someone or something with force Stop shoving me! … English dictionary
Shove ha'penny — (or shove halfpenny, and also known in ancestral form as shoffe grote shove groat in Modern English, slype groat slip groat , and slide thrift)Cite web| url=http://www.tradgames.org.uk/games/Shove HaPenny.htm |title=Shove Ha penny: History and… … Wikipedia
Shove-its — A Shove it is a skateboarding trick where the skateboarder makes their board spin 180 degrees or more under their feet.There are many variations of the Shove it but they all follow the same principle: The skateboarder s lead foot stays in one… … Wikipedia
shove — 1 verb 1 (I, T) to push someone or something, in a rough or careless way, using your hands or shoulders: shove sb aside/into etc: Secret Service men shoved people aside to make way for the President. | shove sb/sth: Stop shoving me or I ll tell… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
shove — shove1 S3 [ʃʌv] v [: Old English; Origin: scufan to push away ] 1.) [I and T] to push someone or something in a rough or careless way, using your hands or shoulders ▪ He shoved her towards the car. ▪ Everyone was pushing and shoving to see the… … Dictionary of contemporary English
shove — [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… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins