schuiven

  • 21shove — [OE] Shove was originally a perfectly respectable, neutral verb for ‘push forcefully, thrust’, but over the centuries it has come down 455 shy in the world, acquiring connotations of rudeness. In common with German schieben and Dutch schuiven it… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 22schieben — Vst. std. (9. Jh.), mhd. schieben, ahd. skioban, mndd. schuven, mndl. sc(h)uven Stammwort. Aus g. * skeub a mit der Variante * skūb a Vst. schieben , auch in gt. skiuban, aschw. skiuva, ae. scūfan, scēofan, afr. skūva. Herkunft unklar. Nomen… …

    Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen sprache

  • 23shove — O.E. scufan push away (class II strong verb; past tense sceaf, pp. scoven), from P.Gmc. *skeub , *skub (Cf. O.N. skufa, O.Fris. skuva, Du. schuiven, O.H.G. scioban, Ger. schieben to push, thrust, Goth. af skiuban) to put away, from PIE root …

    Etymology dictionary

  • 24shove — [OE] Shove was originally a perfectly respectable, neutral verb for ‘push forcefully, thrust’, but over the centuries it has come down in the world, acquiring connotations of rudeness. In common with German schieben and Dutch schuiven it goes… …

    Word origins