Shoulder in a sentence as a noun

Same thing with any cheap chuck cut of beef, or with pork shoulder.

Trying to watch over their shoulder isn't 'Good citizenship', it's crazy and a witch hunt.

The other is an open air discount outlet mall and it's packed, shoulder to shoulder, at all times.

This is an easy one. Brian, Joe, or Nathan needs to be out there to provide a shoulder to cry on and an open checkbook to fix anything that money can fix.

HTP broke into the mole's computer and turned on their webcam, and saw an FBI employee looking over the shoulder of the mole.

At this moment, the biggest security threat to your Telegram messages is your mother reading over your shoulder.

If they're not up to date, how could we expect any non industry insiders to be?A brief blackout is like tapping the media on the shoulder.

Shoulder in a sentence as a verb

Solving a problem with someone looking over your shoulder and forcing you to talk to explain what you are thinking is a skill that I've never seen used in the real world.

"Actually, I guess I can't imagine that. They don't have the balls to admit that. They did the standard lawyer-over-the-shoulder thing of calling it all this big misunderstanding, and we really should have just trusted them to be more benevolent all along.

"And not go up and rape a woman, but perhaps take a chance and put their hand on the girls shoulder during conversation to show interest, where they might have otherwise oddly looked away from them.

So that you can get a better reading of what I can really do, would you mind if we used my laptop, with you looking over my shoulder, as I solved a problem of similar difficulty?

You're driving along a road and you notice a pothole. You pull over to the shoulder, put your hazards on, open up the trunk, take out a reflective vest and tape measure, then you begin to analyze the pothole. You spend an hour analyzing the depth and formation of the pothole and determine that the cause is due mostly to poor mixing of asphalt.

"Climbing the value chain," the MBAs call it -- start off as a provider of outsourced services to companies whose executives' noses are too high in the air to do their dirty work themselves anymore, and then slowly shoulder those companies out of the way by establishing direct relationships with their customers at a lower cost.

Shoulder definitions

noun

the part of the body between the neck and the upper arm

noun

a cut of meat including the upper joint of the foreleg

noun

a ball-and-socket joint between the head of the humerus and a cavity of the scapula

noun

the part of a garment that covers or fits over the shoulder; "an ornamental gold braid on the shoulder of his uniform"

noun

a narrow edge of land (usually unpaved) along the side of a road; "the car pulled off onto the shoulder"

See also: berm

verb

lift onto one's shoulders

verb

push with the shoulders; "He shouldered his way into the crowd"

verb

carry a burden, either real or metaphoric; "shoulder the burden"