Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

shove

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Remove ads

English

Etymology 1

From Middle English schoven, shoven, schouven, from Old English sċūfan, from Proto-West Germanic *skeuban, from Proto-Germanic *skeubaną, from Proto-Indo-European *skewbʰ-.

See also West Frisian skowe, Low German schuven, Dutch schuiven, German schieben, Danish skubbe, Norwegian Bokmål skyve, Norwegian Nynorsk skuva; also Lithuanian skùbti (“to hurry”), Polish skubać (“to pluck”), Albanian humb (“to lose”).

Pronunciation

Verb

shove (third-person singular simple present shoves, present participle shoving, simple past shoved or (obsolete) shave, past participle shoved or (obsolete) shoven)

  1. (transitive) To push, especially roughly or with force.
  2. (intransitive) To move off or along by an act of pushing, as with an oar or pole used in a boat; sometimes with off.
    • 1699, Samuel Garth, The Dispensary:
      He grasped the oar, received his guests on board, and shoved from shore.
  3. (poker, by ellipsis) To make an all-in bet.
  4. (slang) To pass (counterfeit money).
  5. To put hurriedly
Derived terms
Translations

Noun

shove (plural shoves)

  1. A rough push.
  2. (poker slang) An all-in bet.
  3. A forward movement of packed river-ice.
Derived terms
Translations

Etymology 2

Pronunciation

Verb

shove

  1. (obsolete) simple past of shave

Anagrams

Remove ads

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads