shake
verbEtymology
From Middle English schaken, from Old English sċeacan, sċacan (“to shake”), from Proto-West Germanic *skakan, from Proto-Germanic *skakaną (“to shake, swing, escape”), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)keg-, *(s)kek- (“to jump, move”). Cognate with Scots schake, schack (“to shake”), West Frisian schaekje (“to shake”), Dutch schaken (“to elope, make clean, shake”), Low German schaken (“to move, shift, push, shake”) and schacken (“to shake, shock”), Old Norse skaka (“to shake”), Norwegian Nynorsk skaka (“to shake”), Swedish skaka (“to shake”), Danish skage (“to shake”), Dutch schokken (“to shake, shock”), Russian скака́ть (skakátʹ, “to jump”). More at shock.
Definitions
To cause (something) to move rapidly in opposite directions alternatingly.
- The earthquake shook the building.
- He shook the can of soda for thirty seconds before delivering it to me, so that, when I popped it open, soda went everywhere.
To move (one's head) from side to side, especially to indicate refusal, reluctance, or…
To move (one's head) from side to side, especially to indicate refusal, reluctance, or disapproval.
- Shaking his head, he kept repeating “No, no, no”.
- I became alſo a reproch vnto them: when they looked vpon me, they ſhaked their heads.
To move or remove by agitating
To move or remove by agitating; to throw off by a jolting or vibrating motion.
- to shake fruit down from a tree
- […]Shake off the golden ſlumber of repoſe;[…]
- But indeed this Shame was a bold Villain; I could ſcarce ſhake him out of my company; [...]
›+ 27 more definitionsshow fewer
To disturb emotionally
To disturb emotionally; to shock.
- Her father’s death shook her terribly.
- He was shaken by what had happened.
To lose, evade, or get rid of (something).
- I can’t shake the feeling that I forgot something.
To move from side to side.
- She shook with grief.
- The slightest effort made the patient cough. He would stand leaning on a stick and holding a hand to his side, and when the paroxysm had passed it left him shaking.
To shake hands.
- OK, let’s shake on it.
To dance.
- She was shaking it on the dance floor.
To give a tremulous tone to
To give a tremulous tone to; to trill.
- to shake a note in music
To threaten to overthrow.
- The experience shook my religious belief.
- The story of Ms. He and her mother began in the early 1960s, shortly before the Cultural Revolution shook China.
To be agitated
To be agitated; to lose firmness.
The act of shaking or being shaken
The act of shaking or being shaken; tremulous or back-and-forth motion.
- The cat gave the mouse a shake.
- She replied in the negative, with a shake of her head.
A twitch, a spasm, a tremor.
- And when the princely Perſean Diadem, Shall ouerweigh his wearie witleſſe head, And fall like mellowed fruit, with ſhakes of death, In faire Perſea noble Tamburlain Shall be my Regent, and remaine as King:
A dance popular in the 1960s in which the head, limbs, and body are shaken.
- The snake did the frug, the monkey did the shake. The crowd, mostly young couples, tourists and kids, loved it.
A milkshake.
A beverage made by adding ice cream to a (usually carbonated) drink
A beverage made by adding ice cream to a (usually carbonated) drink; a float.
Shake cannabis, small, leafy fragments of cannabis that gather at the bottom of a bag of…
Shake cannabis, small, leafy fragments of cannabis that gather at the bottom of a bag of marijuana.
An adulterant added to cocaine powder.
- […] most suppliers will allow up to 120 grams of shake to a kilo, or 12 percent; kilo-level buyers are usually unhappy if they find more.
A crack or split between the growth rings in wood.
A fissure in rock or earth.
A type of wooden shingle originally made from split timber.
- There is a comet's tail of spilled cream across the cedar shakes and he will have to climb down for the turpentine.
Instant, second. (Especially in two shakes.)
- “And do you realize that in a few shakes I've got to show up at dinner and have Mrs Cream being very, very kind to me? It hurts the pride of the Woosters, Jeeves.”
One of the staves of a hogshead or barrel taken apart.
- Empty casks are[…]taken to pieces, and the staves closely packed up in a cylindrical form, constituting what are called shakes or packs
A rapid alternation of a principal tone with another represented on the next degree of…
A rapid alternation of a principal tone with another represented on the next degree of the staff above or below it; a trill.
In singing, notes (usually high ones) sung vibrato.
A shook of staves and headings.
The redshank, so called from the nodding of its head while on the ground.
A shock or disturbance.
- As long as I had seen Mr Holdsworth in the rooms at the little inn at Hensleydale, where I had been accustomed to look upon him as an invalid, I had not been aware of the visible shake his fever had given to his health.
An informal unit of time equal to 10 nanoseconds.
- Most of the fission energy was released in the last few generations, so if the device blew itself apart before about fifty-seven shakes had elapsed, […]
A surname.
The neighborhood
- synonymjiggle
- synonymquake
- synonymshag
- synonymshake
- synonymtremble
- synonymvibrate
- synonymwiggle
- neighborspasm
- neighborwriggle
- neighborsway
- neighbormove
- neighborjudder
- neighborquaver
- neighborquiver
- neighborrock
- neighborpalpitate
- neighborshiver
- neighborshudder
- neighborthrill
Derived
ashake, atshake, beshake, bone-shaking, forshake, make shit shake, more than one can shake a stick at, more than you can shake a stick at, outshake, overshake, reshake, shakable, shakeable, shake a cloth in the wind, shake a leg, shake-a-leg, shake and bake, shake 'n bake, shake a stick at, shake down, shakefork, shake hands, shake hands with the unemployed, shake in one's boots, shake in one's shoes, shake it, shake it up, shake like a leaf, shaken baby syndrome, shake off, shake off the dust from one's feet, shake one's ass, shake one's elbow, shake one's head, shake one's hocks, shake on it, shakeout, shake out, shake over, shaker · +18 more
Vish — recursive loop
A definitional loop anchored at shake. Each word in the ring is defined by the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself. Scroll to it and watch.
A definitional loop anchored at shake. Each word in the ring appears in the definition of the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself.
10 hops · closes at shake
curated · pre-corpus. live cycle detection across the full graph is the next major milestone.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA