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Definition of jostle verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

jostle

verb
 
/ˈdʒɒsl/
 
/ˈdʒɑːsl/
[transitive, intransitive]
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they jostle
 
/ˈdʒɒsl/
 
/ˈdʒɑːsl/
he / she / it jostles
 
/ˈdʒɒslz/
 
/ˈdʒɑːslz/
past simple jostled
 
/ˈdʒɒsld/
 
/ˈdʒɑːsld/
past participle jostled
 
/ˈdʒɒsld/
 
/ˈdʒɑːsld/
-ing form jostling
 
/ˈdʒɒslɪŋ/
 
/ˈdʒɑːslɪŋ/
Phrasal Verbs
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  1. jostle (somebody) to push roughly against somebody in a crowd
    • The visiting president was jostled by angry demonstrators.
    • People were jostling, arguing and complaining.
    Extra Examples
    • He insists on staying in his car as he doesn't like being jostled.
    • The Senator was jostled by angry demonstrators.
    • The class giggled and jostled each other.
    • The market was full of people jostling and fighting their way to the stalls.
    Word Originlate Middle English justle, from just, an earlier form of joust. The original sense was ‘have sexual intercourse with’; current senses date from the mid 16th cent.
See jostle in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary

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