释义 |
adjective ʃʊkʃʊk informal 1shook upEmotionally or physically disturbed; upset. she looks pretty shook up from the letter Example sentencesExamples - Christine admitted she was all shook up when she met Alan.
- Anyways, I called and told him this and he was really shook up.
- I think he was shook up and might have a bit of whiplash.
- The writer's body finds itself dismantled, brutalised, shook up, helpless, useless puppet, prey to disorganised ideas.
- We tumbled into the snow and I could tell he was a bit shook up.
- The others looked away from the window, slightly shook up at my words.
- Young children, I know the firefighters, the original responders, they are shook up.
- The media are all shook up over Elvis Presley, whose legend seems only to grow in the years after his passing.
- So there were people who felt too shook up and who were worried about what he was saying.
- I carefully stumbled down the cliff path, I was saw that Anna couldn't look while I was coming down she was obviously more shook up than we first thought.
- But Kenny was all shook up at the prospect of performing.
- She called out to her Dad, Jesse in a shook up voice.
- The assaulted 20 year old woman was standing nearby in tears, still shook up and embarrassed after the incident.
- I'm a little shook up about the whole thing and I need to go lie down and recover.
- He was very shook up, but managing well - I would have expected no less from Pat's son.
- This uneven album is at times brilliantly psycho, yeah, but a healthy kind of psycho all shook up and diffused by the healing beat.
- Far from being tempted to doze at the wheel, they emerged from their vehicles wide-eyed and all shook up.
2shook onAustralian NZ Keen on; enthusiastic about. those stories you read about where two blokes get shook on the same sheila
Rhymes betook, book, brook, Brooke, Chinook, chook, Coke, cook, Cooke, crook, forsook, Gluck, hook, look, mistook, nook, partook, rook, schnook, schtuck, Shilluk, Tobruk, took, undercook, undertook noun ʃʊkʃʊk North American A set of components ready for assembly into a box or cask.
Origin Late 18th century: of unknown origin. adjectiveSHo͝okʃʊk shook upinformal predicative Emotionally or physically disturbed; upset. she looks pretty shook up from the letter Example sentencesExamples - Young children, I know the firefighters, the original responders, they are shook up.
- The media are all shook up over Elvis Presley, whose legend seems only to grow in the years after his passing.
- She called out to her Dad, Jesse in a shook up voice.
- But Kenny was all shook up at the prospect of performing.
- I'm a little shook up about the whole thing and I need to go lie down and recover.
- I think he was shook up and might have a bit of whiplash.
- He was very shook up, but managing well - I would have expected no less from Pat's son.
- The others looked away from the window, slightly shook up at my words.
- The assaulted 20 year old woman was standing nearby in tears, still shook up and embarrassed after the incident.
- Anyways, I called and told him this and he was really shook up.
- I carefully stumbled down the cliff path, I was saw that Anna couldn't look while I was coming down she was obviously more shook up than we first thought.
- The writer's body finds itself dismantled, brutalised, shook up, helpless, useless puppet, prey to disorganised ideas.
- So there were people who felt too shook up and who were worried about what he was saying.
- We tumbled into the snow and I could tell he was a bit shook up.
- Far from being tempted to doze at the wheel, they emerged from their vehicles wide-eyed and all shook up.
- Christine admitted she was all shook up when she met Alan.
- This uneven album is at times brilliantly psycho, yeah, but a healthy kind of psycho all shook up and diffused by the healing beat.
nounʃʊkSHo͝ok North American A set of components ready for assembly into a box or cask.
Origin Late 18th century: of unknown origin. |