Shake
101Shake — To leave a place (as in bounce, or roll). Let s shake and go to Taco Bell, I m starving …
102shake — See: more than one could shake a stick at …
103shake-up — noun A change; a reorganization. After the scandal there was a major shake up in the Cabinet …
104shake up — change the command or leadership of something The president decided to shake up top management in order to bring new energy into the organization …
105shake on — informal confirm (an agreement) by shaking hands. → shake …
106shake-up — (also shake out) noun informal a radical reorganization …
107shake-up — /ˈʃeɪk ʌp / (say shayk up) noun a thorough change in a business, department, or the like, as by dismissals, demotions, etc.: *A shake up of the national broadcaster s top management as part of an overhaul designed to streamline the station s… …
108shake — Naue, nauwe, nāueue, lūlū, hō oni, ho oluliluli, luli, luliluli (as the head); ho oluli (as a drink); lūlū, nāueue, ōla i, ōpa ipa i (as the earth); ♦ snake jerkily, kūkū; ♦ snake as with palsy, kuolo; ♦ snake as with cold or fear,… …
109shake-up — Reorganisation. (E.g. Cabinet shake up. A change of personnel.) …
110shake — [OE] Shake is a general Germanic verb, although today its only surviving relatives are Swedish skaka and Norwegian skage. It comes from a prehistoric Germanic *skakan, which goes back to the Indo European base *skeg , *skek (source also of… …