Shifting definition

Shifting





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4 definitions found

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:

  Shift \Shift\ (sh[i^]ft), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Shifted}; p. pr.
     & vb. n. {Shifting}.] [OE. shiften, schiften, to divide,
     change, remove. AS. sciftan to divide; akin to LG. & D.
     schiften to divide, distinguish, part Icel. skipta to divide,
     to part, to shift, to change, Dan skifte, Sw. skifta, and
     probably to Icel. sk[imac]fa to cut into slices, as n., a


     slice, and to E. shive, sheave, n., shiver, n.]
     1. To divide; to distribute; to apportion. [Obs.]
        [1913 Webster]
  
              To which God of his bounty would shift
              Crowns two of flowers well smelling.  --Chaucer.
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     2. To change the place of; to move or remove from one place
        to another; as, to shift a burden from one shoulder to
        another; to shift the blame.
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              Hastily he schifte him[self].         --Piers
                                                    Plowman.
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              Pare saffron between the two St. Mary's days,
              Or set or go shift it that knowest the ways.
                                                    --Tusser.
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     3. To change the position of; to alter the bearings of; to
        turn; as, to shift the helm or sails.
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              Carrying the oar loose, [they] shift it hither and
              thither at pleasure.                  --Sir W.
                                                    Raleigh.
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     4. To exchange for another of the same class; to remove and
        to put some similar thing in its place; to change; as, to
        shift the clothes; to shift the scenes.
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              I would advise you to shift a shirt.  --Shak.
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     5. To change the clothing of; -- used reflexively. [Obs.]
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              As it were to ride day and night; and . . . not to
              have patience to shift me.            --Shak.
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     6. To put off or out of the way by some expedient. "I shifted
        him away." --Shak.
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     {To shift off}, to delay; to defer; to put off; to lay aside.
        
  
     {To shift the scene}, to change the locality or the
        surroundings, as in a play or a story.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              Shift the scene for half an hour;
              Time and place are in thy power.      --Swift.
        [1913 Webster]

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:

  Shifting \Shift"ing\, a.
     1. Changing in place, position, or direction; varying;
        variable; fickle; as, shifting winds; shifting opinions or
        principles.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     2. Adapted or used for shifting anything.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     {Shifting backstays} (Naut.), temporary stays that have to be
        let go whenever the vessel tacks or jibes.
  
     {Shifting ballast}, ballast which may be moved from one side
        of a vessel to another as safety requires.
  
     {Shifting center}. See {Metacenter}.
  
     {Shifting locomotive}. See {Switching engine}, under
        {Switch}.
        [1913 Webster]

From WordNet (r) 2.0 [wn]:

  shifting
       adj 1: continuously moving or changing from position or direction;
              "he drifted into the shifting crowd"; "their nervous
              shifting glances"
       2: continuously varying; "taffeta with shifting colors"
       3: (of soil) unstable; "shifting sands"; "unfirm earth" [syn: {unfirm}]
       n : the act of moving from one place to another; "his constant
           shifting disrupted the class" [syn: {shift}]

From Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0 [moby-thes]:

  227 Moby Thesaurus words for "shifting":
     aberrancy, aberrant, aberration, aberrative, adrift, afloat,
     alternating, alternation, amorphous, bend, bias, bickering,
     boggling, branching off, capricious, captiousness, caviling,
     changeable, changeful, chicane, chicanery, circuitous,
     circuitousness, circumforaneous, corner, crook, curve, dangerous,
     declination, departing, departure, desultory, detour, deviable,
     deviance, deviancy, deviant, deviating, deviation, deviative,
     deviatory, devious, deviousness, digression, digressive,
     discursion, discursive, divagation, divagatory, divarication,
     divergence, diversion, dizzy, dodging, dogleg, double, drift,
     drifting, eccentric, equivocation, errant, errantry, erratic,
     evasion, excursion, excursive, excursus, exorbitation,
     fast and loose, fencing, fickle, fitful, flickering, flighty,
     flitting, floating, fluctuating, fluctuation, footloose,
     footloose and fancy-free, freakish, fugitive, gadding, giddy,
     gypsy-like, gypsyish, hairpin, hairsplitting, hazardous, hedging,
     impetuous, impulsive, inconsistent, inconstant, indecisive,
     indirect, indirection, infirm, insecure, insubstantial, irregular,
     irresolute, irresponsible, labyrinthine, landloping,
     logic-chopping, mazy, meandering, mercurial, migrational,
     migratory, moody, nit-picking, nomad, nomadic, obliquity,
     oscillation, out-of-the-way, paltering, parrying, pendulation,
     pererration, perilous, pettifoggery, planetary, precarious,
     prevarication, provisional, pussyfooting, quibbling, rambling,
     ranging, restless, risky, roaming, roving, scatterbrained,
     seesawing, serpentine, shaky, shapeless, sheer, shift,
     shifting course, shifting path, shifty, shuffling, sidestepping,
     skew, slant, slippery, snaky, spasmodic, spineless, straggling,
     stray, straying, strolling, subterfuge, sweep, swerve, swerving,
     swinging, tack, teeter-tottering, teetering, temporary, tentative,
     tergiversation, ticklish, tottering, traipsing, transient,
     transitory, transmigratory, treacherous, trichoschistism, turn,
     turning, twist, twisting, unaccountable, uncertain, uncontrolled,
     undependable, undirected, undisciplined, unfaithworthy, unfixed,
     unpredictable, unreliable, unrestrained, unsettled, unsolid,
     unsound, unstable, unstable as water, unstaid, unsteadfast,
     unsteady, unsubstantial, unsure, untrustworthy, vacillating,
     vacillation, vagabond, vagrant, variable, variation, veer, veering,
     vicissitude, vicissitudinary, vicissitudinous, volatile, wandering,
     wanton, warp, wavering, wavery, wavy, wayward, whimsical, winding,
     wishy-washy, yaw, zigzag
  
  

















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