participle pushed and shoved) Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see push, shove. To use one's strength to force oneself through a crowded area...
move smoothly over a surface (transitive) to shove, to push roughly (intransitive) to slide, to move oneself Dutch: schuiven Afrikaans: skuif, skuiwe Limburgish:...
Derived from Proto-Slavic *skuti. Cognate with Lithuanian skubėti, English shove and German schieben. IPA(key): /ˈsku.bat͡ɕ/ Rhymes: -ubat͡ɕ Syllabification:...
nose into other people’s business. (reflexive with се) to squeeze, to shove oneself (into a place or through a narrow opening) Conjugation of вра (conjugation...
od‧py‧chać odpychać impf (perfective odepchnąć) (transitive) to push away, to shove away [with od (+ genitive) ‘from something/somewhere’] (transitive) to repel...
o‧de‧pchnąć odepchnąć pf (imperfective odpychać) (transitive) to push away, to shove away [with od (+ genitive) ‘from something/somewhere’] (transitive) to repel...
(transitive) to shove in, to push in, to insert by force (reflexive with се) to cram oneself in a tight place (reflexive with се, figurative) to get oneself into...
consider oneself better and let others know about this opinion) [with nad or ponad (+ instrumental) ‘over whom’] (reflexive with się, colloquial) to shove off...
ta‧szít Rhymes: -iːt taszít (transitive) to thrust, shove, plunge, push, throw (away from oneself) Synonym: lök Antonym: húz (transitive, literally or...
secrete, to conceal, to bury; to plant, to slip, to smuggle, to infect, to shove, to drill; to complot, to scheme, to intrigue”) Verbal noun: دَسّ (dass)...