10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «SHTOOK»
Discover the use of
shtook in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
shtook and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Oxford Dictionary of Modern Slang
1968—. PUBLISHERS WEEKLY A husband trying to puzzle out his woman,
women-Godbless-them in general, and the whole female shtick (1976). [From
Yiddish, from German Stuck piece, play] shtook [[tuk/ noun Also schtook, schtuck,
shtuck ...
John Ayto, John Simpson, 2010
2
German/English Dictionary of Idioms
Aber dafür müßtest du zunächst einmal ruhig sein hineinreißen: jn. hineinreißen
ugs 7 (eher:) jn. rcinreißen - to land s.o. in it, to get so into a mess, to get s.o. in
shtook hineinreiten: jn. hineinreiten ugs 7 (eher:) jn. reinreiten ' t0 land s.o. in it, ...
3
A Concise Collection of College Students' Slang
After staying up till AM, Drew had become very inquant and couldn't stop
laughing. n shtook (v): In trouble. You 're in shtook now. You took my favorite
book. nside (n): In prison. I feel a bit out of touch with the world after being inside
for the last ...
Xin-An Lu, David Graf Jr, 2004
“Young ladies,” I sang, trying to follow the melody of one of the tunes from the
show I had witnessed the day before, “You see here the amazing, most amazing,
most grandly amazing one-shtook twins. Oh, twins of clay, twins from the clay pits,
...
5
Yssthrm 3, Second Flight
You offer me the necklace and thenyou offer to gift me againwith the pure
pleasure of sticking my so humble shtook into the splendid stinkof either ofyour
sensationalcesspits. Sogenerous you are!” “Sarcasm doesn't become you,”
hesaid ...
You aretoo tenderand delicateandutterly deliciousto be giving what youhave to
anyone who has abig shtook. Ifeel privileged tohave tasted your sweetness andI'
m sorry tohave been so ravenous. I hope I didn't scare you. So let'sgo now.
7
Chabers 21st Century Dictionary
2 to dismiss (especially criticism) lighdy: to be indifferent. shrunk see under shrink
shrunken t> adj having shrunk or having been shrunk, shtook or schtook or
schtuk or shtuk /ftuk/ c» noun, slang trouble; bother. • in (dead) shtook, etc in
trouble ...
8
Chambers concise dictionary
[1930s] ♢ in (dead) shtook in trouble or strife. shtoom or schtoom or shtum or
shtumm or Stumm /Jtum/ >adj, slang silent; quiet. [1950s: Yiddish, from German
stumm] ♢ keep shtoom to remain silent. shuck NAm >na husk, pod or shell.
9
The view from Lenin Hills: Soviet youth in ferment
And so we stood for an hour. Then, as we approached the crowded, stuffy
vestibule, the girl accepting garments behind the counter called out portentously,
"Prinimaiutsia eshcho sto shtook (one hundred shtook to go) ." I decided to take
action.
10
English/German Dictionary of Idioms: Supplement to the ...
... shrug of the shoulders Achselzucken: mit einem Achselzucken zur
Tagesordnung übergehen shtook ...then you're/he's]... in shtook Regen: dann] (
da) im Regen stehen if you]... do]... that]..., you'll]... be in trouble] you'll]... be in
shtook/you've]...
Professor Hans Schemann, 2013
4 NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «SHTOOK»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
shtook is used in the context of the following news items.
Manchester United v Cambridge United, FA Cup fourth round replay …
If he hasn't made his mind up about Evans, Smalling, Jones and others this time next year, he'll be in shtook. 19.33 So there still seems to be confusion about ... «Telegraph.co.uk, Feb 15»
Pawel Pawlikowski's Accidental 'Ida' Discovery
So even though Pawlikowski says Lenczewski's leaving at the beginning of filming “left me in a little bit of a shtook,” the director may have found and mentored ... «Wall Street Journal, Jan 15»
Just own up and say that budgets are really hard
Both sides have ended up in similar amounts of shtook trying. There has never been a better time for someone to actually concede this and stop treating voters ... «The Australian Financial Review, Nov 14»
Crossword roundup: Some schtick about shtupping
... detested thing); many of the most strikingly Yiddish-sounding words also start with that SH, then move straight on to a T. Apart from SHTOOK, meaning trouble, ... «The Guardian, Feb 14»