English » Polish

I . shove [ʃʊv] N

shove
to give sth a shove

II . shove [ʃʊv] VB trans

2. shove (place quickly and forcefully):

to shove sth in sth
to shove sth on sth

III . shove [ʃʊv] VB intr

1. shove (push forcefully):

shove

2. shove inf (move oneself):

to shove along [or over]

shove away VB trans (push aside)

shove back VB trans

1. shove back (push back):

shove back
shove back plate

2. shove back (put in place):

shove back

shove off VB intr

1. shove off inf (go away):

just shove off, Chris!

2. shove off (launch boat):

shove off

shove on VB trans

shove over VB trans

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
His wife was shoved to the ground by a police officer.
en.wikipedia.org
They uh, you, give quick little shoves, and give the false impression that you're trembling.
en.wikipedia.org
Witnesses have described the shove's sound as being like that of a train or thunder.
en.wikipedia.org
An officer shoved a transvestite, who responded by hitting him on the head with her purse as the crowd began to boo.
en.wikipedia.org
When they release the referee, they shove him into the opponent.
en.wikipedia.org
His work was quickly branded hermetic and shoved to the side.
en.wikipedia.org
A near-riot broke out after players began shoving each other and spectators came down on the field.
en.wikipedia.org
Yet a form of philosophical activity persists which feels like pushing and shoving things to fit into some fixed perimeter of specified shape.
en.wikipedia.org
Older elephants use trunk-slaps, kicks and shoves to discipline younger ones.
en.wikipedia.org
Players on each side have to shove the bars through the holes in order for their partners to advance forward on the bars.
en.wikipedia.org

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