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1 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) -
2 shove
[ʃʌv] nRuck m;to give sth a \shove etw [weg]rücken vt1) ( push)to \shove sb jdn schieben; ( fig) jdn abdrängen;to \shove sth aside etw beiseiteschieben2) ( place)to \shove sth into a bag etw in eine Tasche stecken;to \shove sth onto the table etw auf dem Tisch [ab]stellen;to \shove sth [down] somewhere etw irgendwohin stellenPHRASES:\shove it [up your arse]! (fam! sl) steck dir das sonst wohin! (sl) vi\shove over, Martha rutsch rüber, Martha ( fam)
См. также в других словарях:
shove along — verb leave; informal or rude (Freq. 1) shove off! The children shoved along Blow now! • Syn: ↑shove off, ↑blow • Hypernyms: ↑go, ↑ … Useful english dictionary
shove off — verb leave; informal or rude shove off! The children shoved along Blow now! • Syn: ↑shove along, ↑blow • Hypernyms: ↑go, ↑go away, ↑ … Useful english dictionary
shove — 1. Depart. Also shove along or off. 2. Put. ♣ Shove it in the drawer. shove, the Dismissal … A concise dictionary of English slang
Shove — (sh[u^]v), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Shoved} (sh[u^]vd); p. pr. & vb. n. {Shoving}.] [OE. shoven, AS. scofian, fr. sc[=u]fan; akin to OFries. sk[=u]va, D. schuiven, G. schieben, OHG. scioban, Icel. sk[=u]fa, sk[=y]fa, Sw. skuffa, Dan. skuffe, Goth.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
shove — [shuv] vt., vi. shoved, shoving [ME shoven < OE scufan, akin to ON skufa, Ger schieben < IE base * skeubh , to throw, shove > SCOFF1] 1. to push or thrust, as along a surface 2. to push roughly or hastily n. the act or an instance of… … English World dictionary
Shove — Shove, v. i. 1. To push or drive forward; to move onward by pushing or jostling. [1913 Webster] 2. To move off or along by an act pushing, as with an oar a pole used by one in a boat; sometimes with off. [1913 Webster] He grasped the oar, eceived … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
shove off — [v] leave quickly blow, clear out, depart, exit, get off, go, go away, pull out, push off, quit, run along, start out, take off, vamoose*; concept 195 Ant. arrive, come … New thesaurus
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 — shove1 shover, n. /shuv/, v., shoved, shoving, n. v.t. 1. to move along by force from behind; push. 2. to push roughly or rudely; jostle. 3. Slang (often vulgar). to go to hell with: Voters are telling Congress to shove its new tax plan. v.i. 4.… … Universalium
shove — v. & n. v. 1 tr. (also absol.) push vigorously; move by hard or rough pushing (shoved him out of the way). 2 intr. (usu. foll. by along, past, through, etc.) make one s way by pushing (shoved through the crowd). 3 tr. colloq. put somewhere… … Useful english dictionary