0
Christine Christie Posted 5 years ago
Grammar

Phrases

Is this sentence correct:


"For some moments, we felt a shake on the earth and some fuss in the air, and we became so frightened that we almost limit to shrug ourselves and to cover our heads."


Does it make sense to say 'to shrug oneself from fear'?

  

Top answer

The given sentence is not right. It should be, for example, something like: For some moments we felt the earth shake and some disturbance in the air, and we became so frightened that we started to tremble and cover our heads. The verb "shrug" is not used in the context of fear.

  • The given sentence is not right.
  • It should be, for example, something like: For some moments we felt the earth shake and some disturbance in the air, and we became so frightened that we started to tremble and cover our heads.
  • The verb "shrug" is not used in the context of fear.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

3 Answers
0

The given sentence is not right. It should be, for example, something like:


For some moments we felt the earth shake and some disturbance in the air, and we became so frightened that we started to tremble and cover our heads.


The verb "shrug" is not used in the context of fear.

0

Possibly:

For some time we felt a shaking in the earth and a rustling in the air, and we became so frightened that all we did was crouch down and cover our heads.

Christine ChristieDoes it make sense to say 'to shrug oneself from fear'?

Not at all.

CJ

0

You can hunch down in fear.

Related Questions