- shave one's
- v.rasurarse, afeitarse, depilarse.
Nuevo Diccionario Inglés-Español. 2014.
Nuevo Diccionario Inglés-Español. 2014.
Shave and a Haircut — in C major[1] … Wikipedia
shave — ► VERB 1) cut the hair off one s face with a razor. 2) cut the hair off (part of the body) with a razor. 3) cut (a thin slice or slices) off something. 4) reduce by a small amount. 5) pass or send something very close to. ► NOUN 1) … English terms dictionary
shave|tail — «SHAYV TAYL», noun. U.S. Slang. a second lieutenant, especially one who has recently been commissioned: the rank happy shavetail ╂[American English; earlier, an army mule (because of the appearance of their tails)] … Useful english dictionary
One Sided Story — Studio album by The Pursuit of Happiness Released 1990 … Wikipedia
Shave brush — The term shave brush or shaving brush refers to a small brush with a handle parallel to the bristles used to apply shaving soap or shaving cream to the face when shaving. They are often decorative; the handle is sometimes made from fine materials … Wikipedia
shave — {{11}}shave (n.) c.1600, something shaved off; from SHAVE (Cf. shave) (v.); O.E. sceafa meant tool for shaving. Meaning a grazing touch is recorded from 1834. Shaver one who shaves is recorded from early 15c.; sense of fellow, chap is slang from… … Etymology dictionary
shave — 01. He hasn t [shaved] for over a week, and he s starting to look pretty scruffy. 02. Bruny Surin [shaved] an incredible two one hundredths of a second off his previous fastest time in today s semi final. 03. I couldn t believe it when he… … Grammatical examples in English
Shave the Whales — Dilbert book book name = Shave the Whales book no = 4 date 1 = October 22 year 1 = 1989 date 2 = August year 2 = 1990 published = April 1 p year = 1994Shave the Whales Is the 4th Dilbert book. It features 9 months of Dilbert comic strips and an… … Wikipedia
Shave — This interesting name is of Anglo Saxon origin, and may be either a topographical or a locational surname. As a topographical name, Shaw was used for someone who lived by a copse, wood, or thicket, derived from the Old English pre 7th Century… … Surnames reference
shave — I. verb (shaved; shaved or shaven; shaving) Etymology: Middle English, from Old English scafan; akin to Lithuanian skobti to pluck, Latin scabere to scratch, and perhaps to Greek koptein to cut more at capon Date: before 12th century transitive… … New Collegiate Dictionary
shave oneself — cut off one s hair at the surface of the skin … English contemporary dictionary