Shift
51shift — 1. an act of defecation When you move your bowels (see movement1), as in the male use do a shift. 2. to copulate Again I suppose from the movement involved: Let we shift... You give baby me. (Theroux, 1971) …
52Shift — antrojo lygio klavišas statusas T sritis informatika apibrėžtis Klavišas, kurį laikant paspaustą renkami antrojo lygio (registro) ženklai: didžiosios raidės arba kiti ženklai, užrašyti klavišo viršutinėje dalyje. Lietuviškoje standartinėje… …
53shift — /ʃɪft/ noun a movement or change ● a shift in the company’s marketing strategy ● The company is taking advantage of a shift in the market towards higher priced goods …
54shift — [OE] Old English sciftan meant ‘arrange’ (it came from a prehistoric Germanic base *skip , which also produced German schichten ‘arrange in layers, pile up’, and traces of its original meaning survive in make shift [16], denoting something… …
55shift in — phr verb Shift in is used with these nouns as the object: ↑chair …
56shift n — Do you know the difference between a pun and a fart? A pun is a sudden shift of wit!shit n …
57shift — Verb. 1. To move quickly. E.g. You should have seen him shift when I told him they were giving away free beer downstairs. Informal 2. To consume large amounts of drink or food. Informal …
58shift — v 1. change direction, Naut. tack; move from one person to another, pass; move around, swerve around, get by, get around, outmaneuver. 2.Usu. shift for manage by oneself, make it on one s own, stand on one s own two feet, paddle one s own canoe,… …
59shift — 1. verb 1) he shifted some chairs Syn: move, transfer, transport, switch, relocate, reposition, rearrange 2) the cargo has shifted Syn: move, slide, slip, be displaced …
60shift — Ha one e, oni, huli lua, ha akua e. ♦ Work shift, manawa hana, mahele hana …