- shook off
- стряхнул; сбрасываться
shook up — встряхнул
English-Russian big medical dictionary. 2005.
shook up — встряхнул
English-Russian big medical dictionary. 2005.
shook off the responsibility — rid himself of accountability, refused to be responsible … English contemporary dictionary
shook off the stigma — refuted the opinions held about him, removed the bad reputation that was believed about him … English contemporary dictionary
Shook — Shake Shake, v. t. [imp. {Shook}; p. p. {Shaken}, ({Shook}, obs.); p. pr. & vb. n. {Shaking}.] [OE. shaken, schaken, AS. scacan, sceacan; akin to Icel. & Sw. skaka, OS. skakan, to depart, to flee. [root]161. Cf. {Shock}, v.] 1. To cause to move… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Shook — Shake Shake, v. t. [imp. {Shook}; p. p. {Shaken}, ({Shook}, obs.); p. pr. & vb. n. {Shaking}.] [OE. shaken, schaken, AS. scacan, sceacan; akin to Icel. & Sw. skaka, OS. skakan, to depart, to flee. [root]161. Cf. {Shock}, v.] 1. To cause to move… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
shake off — 1) PHRASAL VERB If you shake off something that you do not want such as an illness or a bad habit, you manage to recover from it or get rid of it. [V P n (not pron)] Businessmen are frantically trying to shake off the bad habits learned under six … English dictionary
shake off — 1) I think we shook off that cop Syn: get away from, escape, elude, dodge, lose, leave behind, get rid of, give someone the slip, throw off the scent 2) she can t seem to shake off this virus Syn: recover from, get over; … Thesaurus of popular words
shake off — {v.}, {informal} To get away from when followed; get rid of; escape from. * /A convict escaped from prison and shook off the officers trying to follow him./ * /Tom could not shake off his cold./ … Dictionary of American idioms
shake off — {v.}, {informal} To get away from when followed; get rid of; escape from. * /A convict escaped from prison and shook off the officers trying to follow him./ * /Tom could not shake off his cold./ … Dictionary of American idioms
shake off — verb a) To remove (something attached to, on or clinging to an object) by shaking. The archaeologists shook off the dust that had fallen from the roof, and promptly continued their work. b) To dissociate oneself from (an allegation or rumour).… … Wiktionary
shake\ off — v informal To get away from when followed; get rid of; escape from. A convict escaped from prison and shook off the officers trying to follow him. Tom could not shake off his cold … Словарь американских идиом
The Day That Shook the World — Directed by Veljko Bulajić Produced by Vlado Brankovic Bohumil Pokorný Written by Screenplay: Stevan Bulajić Vladimír Bor Paul Jarrico Veljko Bulajić … Wikipedia