Find the word definition

Crossword clues for jostle

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
jostle
verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
position
▪ Pigeons there on the parapet opposite, squabbling, jostling for position.
▪ We jostled for the perfect position and waited for the adults to perform.
▪ He stayed in the shadows as he passed the House of Mirrors with its queue stretching outside, everyone jostling for position.
▪ The paper claims this represents a serious challenge to other Risc vendors jostling for position in the software arena.
▪ The cells seem to jostle for position and about 40 cells leave the wall and enter the hollow interior.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
jockey/manoeuvre/jostle for position
▪ As they jockey for position, firms often adopt quite different strategies within the same industry.
▪ He stayed in the shadows as he passed the House of Mirrors with its queue stretching outside, everyone jostling for position.
▪ It's a spectacular sight, as the wildfowl jockey for position to grab the biggest beak or bill full of food.
▪ Pigeons there on the parapet opposite, squabbling, jostling for position.
▪ Satisfaction and horror jostle for position on his face.
▪ Teenage boys, like young bulls in a herd, often jockey for position and want to try out their own strength.
▪ The paper claims this represents a serious challenge to other Risc vendors jostling for position in the software arena.
▪ They're jockeying for position the moment they see the light at the end of the tunnel.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Passengers were jostling each other at the news kiosk for the last remaining copies of the evening paper.
▪ The children moved forward, jostling to get to the front and see the magician.
▪ Three people were hurt as the crowd jostled for a better view.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Many air atoms crowded together jostle one another, like humans in a crowd, and cause wind.
▪ The telephone rang again and both women hurried toward it, jostling each other in the doorway.
▪ They formed a warm jostling group of six.
▪ We jostled for the perfect position and waited for the adults to perform.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Jostle

Jostle \Jos"tle\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Jostled; p. pr. & vb. n. Jostling.] [A dim. of joust, just, v. See Joust, and cf. Justle.] [Written also justle.] To run against and shake; to push out of the way; to elbow; to hustle; to disturb by crowding; to crowd against. ``Bullies jostled him.''
--Macaulay.

Systems of movement, physical, intellectual, and moral, which are perpetually jostling each other.
--I. Taylor.

Jostle

Jostle \Jos"tle\, v. i. To push; to crowd; to hustle.

None jostle with him for the wall.
--Lamb.

Jostle

Jostle \Jos"tle\, n. A conflict by collisions; a crowding or bumping together; interference.

The jostle of South African nationalities and civilization.
--The Nation.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
jostle

1540s, justle, "to knock against," formed from jousten (see joust) + frequentative suffix -tle. The usual spelling 17c.-18c. was justle. An earlier meaning of the word was "to have sex with" (c.1400). Meaning "to contend for the best position or place" is from 1610s. Related: Jostled; jostling. As a noun from c.1600.

Wiktionary
jostle

n. 1 An experience in which jostling occurs. 2 Being crowded or in a condition of jostling. vb. 1 (context ambitransitive English) To bump into or brush against while in motion; to push aside. 2 (context intransitive English) To move through by pushing and shoving. 3 (context transitive English) To be close to or in physical contact with. 4 (context intransitive English) To contend or vie in order to acquire something. 5 (context dated slang English) To pick or attempt to pick pockets.

WordNet
jostle
  1. n. the act of jostling (forcing your way by pushing) [syn: jostling]

  2. v. make one's way by jostling, pushing, or shoving; "We had to jostle our way to the front of the platform"

  3. come into rough contact with while moving; "The passengers jostled each other in the overcrowded train" [syn: shove]

Wikipedia
Jostle (horse)

Jostle (foaled in 1997 in Kentucky) is an American Thoroughbred racehorse. The daughter of Brocco is probably best remembered for posting a 3-length score in the mile and an eighth Grade II $250,000 Black-Eyed Susan Stakes at Pimlico Race Course on May 19, 2000.

Usage examples of "jostle".

Slight imperfections in the match were negotiated by a jostling crowd of donor or acceptor molecules.

Edgar, came jostling after to share her knee with her scripts and suckle at her bosom while she learned her lines, yet she was always word-perfect even when she played two parts in the one night, Ophelia or Juliet and then, say, Little Pickle, the cute kid in the afterpiece, for the audiences of those days refused to leave the theatre after a tragedy unless the players changed costumes and came back to give them a little something extra to cheer them up again.

The steps were complex and there was a lot of good-humored chaffing as Alec jostled to and fro between Beka and Elsbet.

Then came archers of the guard, shrill-voiced women of the camp, English pages with their fair skins and blue wondering eyes, dark-robed friars, lounging men-at-arms, swarthy loud-tongued Gascon serving-men, seamen from the river, rude peasants of the Medoc, and becloaked and befeathered squires of the court, all jostling and pushing in an ever-changing, many-colored stream, while English, French, Welsh, Basque, and the varied dialects of Gascony and Guienne filled the air with their babel.

Then, in a sudden quiet, just as the Biter stopped her forward movement and began to disengage herself and slide astern, the fore topsail yard, bumped and pulled and jostled in its par rels broke at the truss.

Vigut stabbed the leader with his sword, letting out its lifeblood quickly, but the others poured past, backing Bor against the stone wall of the cave, jostling just out of range of his hooves.

They jostled and fought amongst themselves, every one blaming another, until one brute found the answer in the form of a crimson shadow of a caped man, indelibly stained on the wall of the eastern apse.

Guests of the caravanserai jostled for space with members of the staff.

Those who really did not know her jostled her in the crowd, and I imagined that she would be delighted at being treated thus, as it was a proof of the success of her disguise.

I went with the throng, jostled alike by velvet and dowlas, by youths with their estates upon their backs and naked fantastically painted savages, and trampling the tobacco with which the greedy citizens had planted the very street.

The Vicar pulled me down, Father Wiehnke cuffed me, Mama wept at me, Father Wiehnke whispered at me, the Vicar genuflected and bobbed up and took the drumsticks away from Jesus, genuflected again with the drumsticks and bobbed up again for the drum, took the drum away from Little Lord Jesus, cracked his halo, jostled his watering can, broke off a bit of cloud, tumbled down the steps, and genuflected once more.

A crowd of aides, Endents, and Legates, all wearing insignia that clearly displayed their seniority and their closeness to the Protector, jostled for position.

Over the course of the next eighteen pages, in panels that crowded, jostled, piled one on top of the other, and threatened to burst the margins of the page, the Wehrmacht, the Luftwaffe, and the Escapist had duked it out.

He grunted when he was jostled by a hurrying purveyor of marvelously-wrought gauds of glass beads and amber and the teeth of sea-dogs.

It was in the leather goods department some quarter of an hour later that Adela Chemping caught sight of her nephew, separated from her by a rampart of suit-cases and portmanteaux and hemmed in by the jostling crush of human beings that now invaded every corner of the great shopping emporium.