English edit

Etymology edit

shook +‎ -eth

Adjective edit

shooketh (comparative more shooketh, superlative most shooketh)

  1. (slang, humorous) Shaken up; rattled; shocked or surprised.
    • 2018, Kerry Ingram, "Beauty to get you in the spirit", The Towerlight (Towson University), 30 October 2018, page 11:
      When this collection was first teased on Kylie Jenner's Instagram and Snapchat stories, viewers were shooketh everywhere (myself included).
    • 2019, Leah Vernon, Unashamed: Musings of a Fat, Black Muslim, unnumbered page:
      This is nuts. A refined website like CBS chose my story as the top. I was shooketh.
    • 2020, C. H. Mitford, Cast of Riverdale: Issue #3, page 9:
      Not only has Riverdale taken place, but everyone is shooketh! Peeps are devoted to this show, and we get it.
    • 2020, Carson Tucker, "A J.D. in Imperfection", Columbus Bar Lawyers Quarterly, Winter 2020, page 59:
      My entire world was "shooketh" when a wise mentor told me that I need to start treating myself like I treat other people.
    • 2020 April, Sarah Selena, “Nostradamus Predictions for 2020”, in NUKS Magic, page 11:
      I hope you were sufficiently shooketh by them and let us hope that the poetry of an alternative facts dude in the 16th century holds no weight and rest easy friends!
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:shooketh.

Synonyms edit

Verb edit

shooketh

  1. (nonstandard, slang, humorous) past participle of shake
    • 2018, Kali Daniel, quoted in "The Case Of Star Wars V. Star Trek", SET Magazine (2018), Volume 6, Issue 4, page 18:
      Amidala's headdress alone hath shooketh me to my core.