shuffle

shuffle — noun

1. when you give things a shuffle, you shift them from where they were to new spots

1.名詞B2
釋義

when you give things a shuffle, you shift them from where they were to new spots or a different arrangement.

例句

Gabriela did a quick shuffle of the files after the meeting ended.

collocation: a shuffle of [papers/files/items]

A weekly shuffle of the shelves helps sell more products in the shop.

同義詞
  • reorganisation

    more formal; implies a planned change rather than a simple physical move

  • rearrangement

    focuses on changing the order, usually for clarity or convenience

反義詞
  • stillness

    absence of any movement or reordering

文法句型

a shuffle of [something]

2. a change in which roles or jobs are reassigned among people in a group, especial

2.名詞B2
釋義

a change in which roles or jobs are reassigned among people in a group, especially in politics or business — for example, a cabinet shuffle or a management shake-up.

例句

The prime minister carried out a cabinet shuffle after the election.

common in political contexts: cabinet shuffle / management shuffle

A shuffle of the sales team brought two new managers into the department.

同義詞
  • reshuffle

    more common in political contexts; implies a broader or more formal reorganisation

  • reorganisation

    broader in scope; can cover structural changes beyond personnel

文法句型

a shuffle in/of [group]

用法筆記

Frequently appears in political and corporate contexts. A cabinet shuffle reassigns ministers without changing the ruling party. Distinguish from noun sense 1 (REARRANGEMENT), which refers to physical objects rather than people's roles.

3. in card games, a shuffle is the act of taking all the cards and rearranging them

3.名詞B1
釋義

in card games, a shuffle is the act of taking all the cards and rearranging them so that their order becomes random and unknown to everyone before the next deal.

例句

Ryo gave the deck a quick shuffle before dealing the cards.

pattern: give [deck] a shuffle

A good shuffle makes sure each player gets a fair hand.

同義詞
  • mix-up

    less specific; does not imply the purpose of fair dealing in a game

文法句型

give [something] a shuffle

用法筆記

Can also apply to dominoes, tiles, or other game pieces that need randomising. The related verb form (verb sense 4) is more frequent in everyday speech. Distinguish from the random-play sense (noun sense 4), which refers only to digital media.

常見錯誤

He did a shuffle of the documents before the meeting' (when meaning to rearrange, not randomise).
He shuffled the deck before dealing.
💡the noun 'shuffle' for randomisation is almost always about cards or games, not general items.

4. a setting on music apps, phones, and streaming services that picks tracks in an

4.名詞B1
釋義

a setting on music apps, phones, and streaming services that picks tracks in an unpredictable sequence instead of following the playlist order you set.

例句

Esme put her playlist on shuffle for the long drive home.

common phrase: on shuffle / put on shuffle

The shuffle mode played three slow songs in a row by chance.

同義詞
  • random play

    more technical; used in device settings menus rather than casual speech

  • random mode

    also found in device settings; sounds less natural in everyday conversation

反義詞

文法句型

on shuffle

put [playlist/music] on shuffle

用法筆記

Usually uncountable in technology contexts ('put it on shuffle'). Countable uses like 'give it a shuffle' are rare and informal. Not used for physical media like CDs or vinyl records — only for digital playlists and libraries.

5. a dragging style of walking where your feet slide forward without leaving the gr

5.名詞B1
釋義

a dragging style of walking where your feet slide forward without leaving the ground, making a soft scraping sound, often because of old age, tiredness, or ill-fitting shoes.

例句

The old dog walked with a slow shuffle across the kitchen floor.

describes walking style: a slow shuffle

We could hear the shuffle of bedroom slippers coming down the hall.

同義詞
  • drag

    emphasises the effort of moving with heavy or tired feet

  • scuff

    focuses on the scraping sound more than the body movement

文法句型

a/the shuffle of [feet/slippers/steps]

用法筆記

Can be used as both a countable noun ('a slow shuffle') and with 'the shuffle of' + noun to describe the sound. Commonly pairs with footwear ('slippers', 'shoes') and body parts ('feet'). The verb sense (verb sense 1) is more common in everyday speech.

shuffle — verb