shove
/icons/point.icon 押す
push: 特定の意図をもって, 力を入れて何かを自分の反対側に押し動かすことをいう
press: 指・手足・機械などを使い, 一定の圧力で押すこと
shove: 〘くだけて〙 で, 人や物をある方向にぞんざいに押すことをいう
thrust: 〘主に書〙 で, 人や物を強く突くように押すことをいう
https://gyazo.com/0270d5e066686df7d813f6c498755bed
source: Yona of the dawn❤ | Anime Amino
verb with object
push (someone or something) roughly:
⦅くだけて⦆ (乱暴に)〈人・物〉を押す, 突き飛ばす; 押しのける(away, aside); «…に» 〈人・物〉を押しつける «against, at» ; «…から» 〈人・物〉を押し出す «out of»
e.g. police started pushing and shoving people down the street
«…を» (乱暴に)押す «at»
e.g. no object : kids pushed, kicked, and shoved.
no object, with adverbial of direction make one's way by pushing someone or something:
押して進む
e.g. Woody shoved past him.
put (something) somewhere carelessly or roughly:
〖~ A+副詞〗 «…に» (無造作に)A〈物〉を入れる[突っ込む, 押し込む] (!〖副詞〗は場所の表現)
e.g. she shoved the books into her briefcase.
(shove it) informal used to express angry dismissal of something:
⦅主に米・ぞんざいに⦆ (依頼などを断って)いやなこった, そんなものくそ食らえだ (!Shove it up your ass! (そんなものはてめえのケツにでも突っ込んでろ)の省略) .
e.g. I should have told the boss to shove it.
noun usually in singular
a strong push:
〖通例a ~〗 ひと押し, ひと突き
e.g. she gave him a hefty shove and he nearly fell.
PHRASAL VERBS
shove off
1. usually in imperative informal go away:
e.g. shove off—you're bothering the customers.
2. push away from the shore or another vessel in a boat.
ORIGIN
Old English scūfan (verb), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch schuiven and German schieben, also to shuffle.