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  1. Dictionary
    shivering
    /ˈSHiv(ə)riNG/

    adjective

    • 1. shaking slightly and uncontrollably as a result of being cold, frightened, or excited: "he bought a warm winter coat for a shivering man"

    noun

    • 1. the action of shaking slightly and uncontrollably as a result of being cold, frightened, or excited: "gradually his shivering slowed"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. verb [ I ] uk / ˈʃɪv.ə r/ us / ˈʃɪv.ɚ / B2. When people or animals shiver, they shake slightly because they feel cold, ill, or frightened: The poor dog - it's shivering! He shivered with cold in his thin cotton shirt. Fewer examples. She shivered, and gathered the blanket around her. Arthur shivered involuntarily as he came out of the building.

  3. (esp. of a person or animal) to shake slightly and quickly because of feeling cold, ill, or frightened: Your creepy look makes me shiver. Robbins shivered in the chill air. shiver.

  4. noun (1) shiv· er ˈshi-vər. Synonyms of shiver. : one of the small pieces into which a brittle thing is broken by sudden violence. shiver. 2 of 4. verb (1) shivered; shivering ˈshi-və-riŋ. ˈshiv-riŋ. transitive + intransitive. : to break into many small pieces : shatter. shiver. 3 of 4. verb (2) shivered; shivering. intransitive verb. 1.

  5. 6 days ago · adjective. vibrating slightly and irregularly; as e.g. with fear or cold or like the leaves of an aspen in a breeze. “sparkling light from the shivering crystals of the chandelier”. synonyms: quivery, shaky, trembling. unsteady. subject to change or variation.

  6. v. shiv·ered, shiv·er·ing, shiv·ers. v.intr. 1. To shake or tremble, as from cold or fear. See Synonyms at shake. 2. To quiver or vibrate, as by the force of the wind. v.tr. Nautical. To cause (a sail) to flutter by sailing too close to the wind.

  7. verb [ I ] uk / ˈʃɪv.ə r/ us / ˈʃɪv.ɚ / B2. When people or animals shiver, they shake slightly because they feel cold, ill, or frightened: The poor dog - it's shivering! He shivered with cold in his thin cotton shirt. Fewer examples. She shivered, and gathered the blanket around her. Arthur shivered involuntarily as he came out of the building.

  8. We shudder with horror or abhorrence; the agitation is more powerful and deep-seated than shivering or trembling: to shudder at pictures of an atrocity.

  9. People shiver, or shake and tremble, when they're very cold. You might shiver in the snow if you forget to wear your winter coat. While you are most likely to shiver in the cold, you might also shiver from excitement or even fear.

  10. Shiver, quake, shudder refer to a vibratory muscular movement, a trembling, usually involuntary. We shiver with cold, or a sensation such as that of cold: to shiver in thin clothing on a frosty day; to shiver with pleasant anticipation. We quake especially with fear: to quake with fright.

  11. Definition of shiver verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.