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shaking
Shaking tarimas:
/'ʃeɪkɪŋ /
Shaking audio:
Žodžio paaiškinimas anglų kalba:
- verb-transitive: To cause to move to and fro with jerky movements.
- verb-transitive: To cause to quiver, tremble, vibrate, or rock.
- verb-transitive: To cause to lose stability or waver: a crisis that shook my deepest beliefs.
- verb-transitive: To remove or dislodge by jerky movements: shook the dust from the cushions.
- verb-transitive: To bring to a specified condition by or as if by shaking: "It is not easy to shake one's heart free of the impression” ( John Middleton Murry).
- verb-transitive: Slang To get rid of: couldn't shake the man who was following us.
- verb-transitive: To disturb or agitate; unnerve: She was shaken by the news of the disaster.
- verb-transitive: To brandish or wave, especially in anger: shake one's fist.
- verb-transitive: To clasp (hands) in greeting or leave-taking or as a sign of agreement.
- verb-transitive: Music To trill (a note).
- verb-transitive: Games To rattle and mix (dice) before casting.
- verb-intransitive: To move to and fro in short, irregular, often jerky movements.
- verb-intransitive: To tremble, as from cold or in anger.
- verb-intransitive: To be unsteady; totter or waver.
- verb-intransitive: To move something vigorously up and down or from side to side, as in mixing.
- verb-intransitive: Music To trill.
- verb-intransitive: To shake hands: Let's shake on it.
- noun: The act of shaking.
- noun: A trembling or quivering movement.
- noun: Informal An earthquake.
- noun: A fissure in rock.
- noun: A crack in timber caused by wind or frost.
- noun: Informal A moment or instant; a trice: I'll do it in a shake.
- noun: Music A trill.
- noun: See
milk shake . - noun: A beverage in which the ingredients are mixed by shaking.
- noun: A rough shingle used to cover rustic buildings, such as barns: cedar shakes.
- noun: Informal Uncontrollable trembling, as in a person who is cold, frightened, feverish, or ill. Often used with the: was suffering from a bad case of the shakes.
- noun: Slang A bargain or deal: getting a fair shake.
- phrasal-verb: shake down Slang To extort money from.
- phrasal-verb: shake down Slang To make a thorough search of: shook down the prisoners' cells for hidden weapons.
- phrasal-verb: shake down To subject (a new ship or aircraft) to shakedown testing.
- phrasal-verb: shake down To become acclimated or accustomed, as to a new environment or a new job.
- phrasal-verb: shake off To free oneself of; get rid of: We shook off our fears.
- phrasal-verb: shake up To upset by or as if by a physical jolt or shock: was badly shaken up by the accident.
- phrasal-verb: shake up To subject to a drastic rearrangement or reorganization: new management bent on shaking up the company.
- idiom: give (someone) the shake Slang To escape from or get rid of: We managed to give our pursuers the shake.
- idiom: no great shakes Slang Unexceptional; ordinary: "stepping in between the victim and the bully, even when the victim happens to be no great shakes” ( Louis Auchincloss).
- idiom: shake a leg Informal To dance.
- idiom: shake a leg Informal To move quickly; hurry up.
- idiom: shake (another's) tree Slang To arouse to action or reaction; disturb: "[He] so shook Hollywood's tree that . . . all manner of . . . people called me unsolicited to itemize his mistakes or praise his courage” ( Tina Brown).
- idiom: shake a stick at Slang To point out, designate, or name: "All of a sudden there came into being a vast conservative infrastructure: think-tanks . . . and more foundations than you could shake a stick at” ( National Review).
Lietuviškos reikšmės:
- sudrebėjimas
- drebinimas
- sukrėtimas
- supimas
- (maliarijos) priepuolis