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1 jostle
1. intransitive verb2. transitive verbjostle [against each other] — aneinander stoßen
* * *['‹osl](to push roughly: We were jostled by the crowd; I felt people jostling against me in the dark.) rempeln* * *jos·tle[ˈʤɒsl̩, AM ˈʤɑ:sl̩]I. vtII. vicrowds of people \jostled at the main entrance to the concert hall Scharen von Menschen drängelten sich am Haupteingang zur Konzerthalle2. (compete)* * *['dZɒsl]1. vidrängelnhe jostled against me — er rempelte mich an
the people jostling round the stalls — die Leute, die sich vor den Buden drängelten
they are jostling for the top job — sie streiten sich or rangeln um den Spitzenjob
See:→ academic.ru/56923/position">position2. vtanrempeln, schubsenthey jostled him out of the room — sie drängten or schubsten ihn aus dem Zimmer
3. nGedränge nt, Rempelei f* * *A v/t1. anrempeln2. dränge(l)n:jostle one’s way through sich (hindurch)drängen durchB v/i1. jostle against rempeln gegen, anrempeln2. (sich) dränge(l)n3. US sl Taschendiebstähle begehenC s1. Rempelei f2. Gedränge n* * *1. intransitive verb2. transitive verbjostle [against each other] — aneinander stoßen
* * *n.Gedränge n. v.anrempeln v. -
2 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:
jostle — I (bump into) verb bang into, buffet, bump, bump against, butt, collide, crash into, crowd, elbow, fodicare, graze against, hit against, hustle, jab, jar, jolt, knock, knock against, nudge, poke, press, prod, push, run against, shake, shove,… … Law dictionary
jostle — ► VERB 1) push or bump against roughly. 2) (jostle for) struggle or compete forcefully for. ► NOUN ▪ the action of jostling. ORIGIN from JOUST(Cf. ↑jouster) … English terms dictionary
Jostle — Jos tle, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Jostled}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Jostling}.] [A dim. of joust, just, v. See {Joust}, and cf. {Justle}.] [Written also {justle}.] To run against and shake; to push out of the way; to elbow; to hustle; to disturb by… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
jostle — (v.) 1540s, justle, to knock against, formed from jousten (see JOUST (Cf. joust)) + frequentative suffix tle. The usual spelling 17c. 18c. was justle. An earlier meaning of the word was to have sex with (c.1400). Meaning to contend for the best… … Etymology dictionary
jostle — jostlement, n. jostler, n. /jos euhl/, v., jostled, jostling, n. v.t. 1. to bump, push, shove, brush against, or elbow roughly or rudely. 2. to drive or force by, or as if by, pushing or shoving: The crowd jostled him into the subway. 3. to exist … Universalium
jostle — UK [ˈdʒɒs(ə)l] / US [ˈdʒɑs(ə)l] verb Word forms jostle : present tense I/you/we/they jostle he/she/it jostles present participle jostling past tense jostled past participle jostled 1) [intransitive] to compete for something two candidates… … English dictionary
jostle — verb 1) jostled by the crowd Syn: bump into/against, knock into/against, bang into, collide with, plow into, jolt; push, shove, elbow, mob, shoulder; informal barrel into, bulldoze 2) media empires jostle to catch the eye of Asian readers and… … Thesaurus of popular words
jostle — v 1. brush against, jog, bump; jolt, jar, shock; joggle, jiggle, jerk, shake, justle; bounce, jounce; strike against, collide, Rare. hurtle, clash, hit against, batter, run against, butt against, lunge against; attack, assault, assail, bombard;… … A Note on the Style of the synonym finder
jostle — jos|tle [ˈdʒɔsəl US ˈdʒa: ] v [Date: 1500 1600; Origin: joust; JOUSTING] 1.) [I and T] to push or knock against someone in a crowd, especially so that you can get somewhere or do something before other people jostle for ▪ Followers of the… … Dictionary of contemporary English
jostle — jos|tle [ dʒasl ] verb 1. ) intransitive or transitive to push against someone because you are trying to move past them in a crowd: We managed to jostle our way to the front. 2. ) intransitive to compete for something: two candidates jostling for … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
jostle — [[t]ʤɒ̱s(ə)l[/t]] jostles, jostling, jostled 1) VERB If people jostle you, they bump against you or push you in a way that annoys you, usually because you are in a crowd and they are trying to get past you. [V n] You get 2,000 people jostling… … English dictionary