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1 shuffle
1. noun1) Schlurfen, das2) (Cards) Mischen, dasgive the cards a [good] shuffle — die Karten [gut] mischen
2. transitive verbcabinet shuffle — Kabinettsumbildung, die
1) (rearrange) umbilden [Kabinett]; neu verteilen [Aufgaben]; sortieren [Schriftstücke usw.]; (mix up) durcheinander bringen2) (Cards) mischen3)3. intransitive verbhe shuffles his feet when he walks — er schlurft beim Gehen
1) (Cards) mischen3) (shift one's position) herumrutschen* * *1. verb1) (to move (one's feet) along the ground etc without lifting them: Do stop shuffling (your feet)!; The old man shuffled along the street.) schlurfen2. noun(an act of shuffling: He gave the cards a shuffle.) das Schlurfen,das Mischen* * *shuf·fle[ˈʃʌfl̩]I. nto give the cards a \shuffle die Karten mischenshe gave her papers a quick \shuffle sie sortierte ihre Papiere rasch neucabinet \shuffle Kabinettsumbildung fmanagement \shuffle personelle Umstrukturierung in der GeschäftsleitungII. vt1. (mix)2. (move around)▪ to \shuffle sth [around] etw hin- und herschiebenpaper-shuffling employee Angestellte(r) f(m), die/der nur Papier umschichtet3. (drag)to \shuffle one's feet schlurfenIII. vi1. CARDS Karten mischen2. (sort through)▪ to \shuffle through sth etw durchblättern3. (drag one's feet) schlurfen* * *['ʃʌfl]1. n2) (= dance) Shuffle m3) (CARDS)to get lost in the shuffle (people) — in der Menge untergehen; (things) verloren gehen
2. vt1)he sat there shuffling his feet — er saß da und scharrte mit den Füßen
2) cards mischentop men are shuffled around quite often — die Männer an der Spitze werden oft von einem Ressort ins andere versetzt
3. vi1) (= walk) schlurfenthe dancers shuffled around on the floor —
* * *shuffle [ˈʃʌfl]A s2. a) Schleifschritt mb) Schleifer m (Tanz)3. fig Ausflucht f, Trick m, Schwindel m4. (Karten)Mischen nB v/i1. schlurfen, (mit den Füßen) scharren:shuffle along dahinschlurfen;shuffle through sth fig etwas flüchtig erledigen2. (beim Tanzen) die Füße schleifen lassenshuffle into one’s clothes6. Ausflüchte machen, sich herauszuwinden suchen ( out of aus)7. (die Karten) mischenC v/t1. schleifen oder schlurfen lassen:shuffle one’s feet → B 12. einen Tanz mit schleifenden Schritten tanzen3. die Karten etc mischen:shuffle the cards fig seine Taktik ändern4. fig hin- und herschieben, jonglieren mit6. herausschmuggeln ( out of aus)7. etwas durcheinanderwerfen8. vermischen, -mengen ( beide:among, with mit)* * *1. noun1) Schlurfen, daswalk with a shuffle — schlurfend gehen; schlurfen
2) (Cards) Mischen, dasgive the cards a [good] shuffle — die Karten [gut] mischen
2. transitive verbcabinet shuffle — Kabinettsumbildung, die
1) (rearrange) umbilden [Kabinett]; neu verteilen [Aufgaben]; sortieren [Schriftstücke usw.]; (mix up) durcheinander bringen2) (Cards) mischen3)3. intransitive verb1) (Cards) mischen2) (move, walk) schlurfen3) (shift one's position) herumrutschen* * *v.schieben v.(§ p.,pp.: schob, geschoben)schlurfen v. -
2 shuffle
shuf·fle [ʼʃʌfl̩] nto give the cards a \shuffle die Karten mischenshe gave her papers a quick \shuffle sie sortierte ihre Papiere rasch neucabinet \shuffle Kabinettsumbildung f;management \shuffle personelle Umstrukturierung in der Geschäftsleitung1) ( mix)2) ( move around)to \shuffle sth [around] etw hin- und herschieben;paper-shuffling employee Angestellte(r) f(m), die/der nur Papier umschichtet3) ( drag)to \shuffle one's feet schlurfen vi1) cards Karten mischen2) ( sort through)to \shuffle through sth etw durchblättern3) ( drag one's feet) schlurfen;to \shuffle around unruhig sein, herumzappeln ( fam) -
3 scuff
1. transitive verb1) (graze) streifenscuff one's shoe against something — etwas mit dem Schuh streifen
2) (mark by grazing) verkratzen, verschrammen [Schuhe, Fußboden]2. nounKratzer, der; Kratzspur, die; Schramme, die* * *[skʌf]I. vt1. (mark)2. (drag along the ground)to \scuff one's feet schlurfenII. vi2. (shuffle) schlurfen* * *[skʌf]1. vtabwetzen2. vischlurfenthe children scuffed through the pile of leaves — die Kinder raschelten or wateten durch den Laubhaufen
3. n2) (US: slipper) Pantolette f* * *scuff [skʌf]A v/i schlurfen(d gehen)B v/t2. abstoßen, abnutzen3. US mit dem Fuß stoßen nachC s1. Schlurfen n2. Abnutzung f, abgestoßene Stelle3. US (Art) Pantoffel m* * *1. transitive verb1) (graze) streifen2) (mark by grazing) verkratzen, verschrammen [Schuhe, Fußboden]2. nounKratzer, der; Kratzspur, die; Schramme, die* * *n.Abnutzung f. v.abnutzen v.abscharren v.abstoßen v.aufscharren v.boxen v.schlurfen v.schlurfend gehen ausdr. -
4 shamble
1. intransitive verb 2. nounSchlurfen, das* * *['ʃæmbl](to walk slowly and awkwardly, (as if) not lifting one's feet properly off the ground: The old man shambled wearily along the street.) watscheln* * *sham·ble[ˈʃæmbl̩]with a shambling gait mit einem watschelnden Gang* * *['ʃmbl]vitrotten; (people also) latschen (inf)every morning he shambles in half an hour late — er kommt jeden Morgen eine halbe Stunde zu spät angelatscht (inf)
* * *shamble [ˈʃæmbl]A v/ia) watschelnb) schlurfen:shambling gait → BB sa) Watschelgang mb) schlurfender Gang* * *1. intransitive verb 2. nounSchlurfen, das* * *v.watscheln v. -
5 scuff
[skʌf] vt1) ( mark)to \scuff sth etw verschrammen;( wear away) etw abwetzen2) ( drag along the ground)to \scuff one's feet schlurfen vi2) ( shuffle) schlurfen
См. также в других словарях:
Shuffle (disambiguation) — The terms shuffle or shuffling may refer to any of the following:An act of randomization: * shuffling the arbitrary reordering of items, especially a deck of cards, to introduce an element of chance in their selection * Shuffle play, the… … Wikipedia
shuffle — ► VERB 1) walk by dragging one s feet along or without lifting them fully from the ground. 2) restlessly shift one s position. 3) rearrange (a pack of cards) by sliding them over each other quickly. 4) (shuffle through) sort or look through (a… … English terms dictionary
shuffle — /shuf euhl/, v., shuffled, shuffling, n. v.i. 1. to walk without lifting the feet or with clumsy steps and a shambling gait. 2. to scrape the feet over the floor in dancing. 3. to move clumsily (usually fol. by into): to shuffle into one s… … Universalium
shuffle — shuf•fle [[t]ˈʃʌf əl[/t]] v. fled, fling, n. 1) to walk without lifting the feet; shamble 2) mad to slide the feet lazily in dancing 3) to move clumsily (usu. fol. by into): to shuffle into one s clothes[/ex] 4) to act evasively: to shuffle out… … From formal English to slang
shuffle — [ ʃʌf(ə)l] verb 1》 walk by dragging one s feet along or without lifting them fully from the ground. ↘restlessly shift one s position. ↘(shuffle something off/shuffle out of something) get out of or avoid a responsibility or obligation. 2》 … English new terms dictionary
shuffle — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. rearrange, switch, shift, mix, intermingle, jumble; scuff, drag; fidget; scuffle, shamble, slouch; equivocate, quibble, evade. See interchange, slowness, changeableness. II (Roget s IV) v. 1. [To move … English dictionary for students
shuffle — verb 1) they shuffled along the passage Syn: shamble, drag one s feet, totter, dodder 2) she shuffled her feet Syn: scrape, drag, scuffle, scuff 3) he shuffled the cards … Thesaurus of popular words
shuffle — verb 1) they shuffled along the passage Syn: shamble, dodder, drag one s feet 2) she shuffled her feet Syn: scrape, drag, scuffle 3) he shuffled the cards Syn … Synonyms and antonyms dictionary
shuffle — shuf·fle || ʃʌfl n. slow dragging gait; evasion, avoidance; mixing of playing cards; mixture, jumble; sliding dance step v. mix, scramble; walk slowly while dragging one s feet; evade, avoid; rearrange the order of playing cards; make a… … English contemporary dictionary
shuffle — [shuf′əl] vt. shuffled, shuffling [Early ModE, prob. < or akin to LowG schuffeln, to walk clumsily, shuffle cards < base of SHOVE] 1. a) to move (the feet) with a dragging or shoving gait b) to perform (a dance) with such steps 2. to mix… … English World dictionary
Shuffle — Shuf fle, v. i. 1. To change the relative position of cards in a pack; as, to shuffle and cut. [1913 Webster] 2. To change one s position; to shift ground; to evade questions; to resort to equivocation; to prevaricate. [1913 Webster] I myself … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English