push and shove
English
editVerb
editpush and shove (third-person singular simple present pushes and shoves, present participle pushing and shoving, simple past and past participle pushed and shoved)
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see push, shove.
- To use one's strength to force oneself through a crowded area.
- He pushed and shoved his way to the stage to steal the microphone from the singer.
Translations
editforce oneself through a crowded area
Noun
editQuotations
edit- 1880, John Charles Ready Colomb, The Defence of Great and Greater Britain, Edward Stanford, pages 190–191:
- No student of modern warfare can observe the increasing facilities of transporting live animals in large numbers over long sea distances—which have been created by the push and shove rivalry of peaceful commercial competition—without reflecting how means so afforded can be turned to account in war.
- 2012 December 3, Max Lucado, Life to the Full, Thomas Nelson, page 16:
- In the push and shove of this day, enter my life and help me know that you are coming to meet me at every point of need.
- 2014 February, Charles Wallman, A Life of Leathergy, Lulu.com, page 20:
- Gloria had always been more suited to the push and shove of the business world.
- 2015 September 5, Carl Dourish, Time In Time, Past Life Regression, Lulu.com, unpaged:
- Mature souls tend to gravitate to a calm environment, they prefer the relative tranquillity[sic] of the suburbs to the push and shove of a large City.
- 2019, Jonathan Phillips, The Life and Legend of the Sultan Saladin, Yale University Press, page 28:
- The distinctive noises and smells of each street, along with the push and shove of traders, pilgrims, clerics and soldiers, made for an energised community that impressed contemporary tourists
Synonyms
editFurther reading
edit- “push and shove”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.