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1 shock
I 1. ʃok noun1) (a severe emotional disturbance: The news gave us all a shock.) sjokk2) ((often electric shock) the effect on the body of an electric current: He got a slight shock when he touched the live wire.) støt3) (a sudden blow coming with great force: the shock of an earthquake.) rystelse4) (a medical condition caused by a severe mental or physical shock: He was suffering from shock after the crash.) sjokk2. verb(to give a shock to; to upset or horrify: Everyone was shocked by his death; The amount of violence shown on television shocks me.) sjokkere, ryste- shocker- shocking
- shockingly
- shock-absorber II ʃok noun(a bushy mass (of hair) on a person's head.) bustet hårmankesjokk--------sjokkere--------støkkIsubst. \/ʃɒk\/(korn)stakk, såtea shock of hair en kraftig hårmankeIIsubst. \/ʃɒk\/1) (voldsomt) støt, (kraftig) slag, sammenstøt, kollisjon2) sjokk, knekk, slag3) ( medisin) sjokk4) ( elektrisitet) støt, el-sjokkelectric shock eller shock elektrisk støtgo into shock få sjokk, komme i sjokktilstandin shock i sjokktilstandIIIverb \/ʃɒk\/sette, legge i stakkershock the corn sette kornet i stakkIVverb \/ʃɒk\/1) ryste, opprøre, sjokkere, støte2) ( medisin) gi et sjokk3) kollidere
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shock — shock1 W2S2 [ʃɔk US ʃa:k] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(unexpected event/situation)¦ 2¦(unexpected unpleasant feeling)¦ 3¦(medical)¦ 4¦(electricity)¦ 5¦(vehicle)¦ 6 shock of hair 7¦(sudden change)¦ 8¦(shaking)¦ ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Sense: 1 5, 7 8; Orig … Dictionary of contemporary English
shock — {{11}}shock (1) sudden blow, 1560s, a military term, from M.Fr. choc violent attack, from O.Fr. choquer strike against, probably from Frankish, from a P.Gmc. imitative base (Cf. M.Du. schokken to push, jolt, O.H.G. scoc jolt, swing ). Meaning a… … Etymology dictionary
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