shack up
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English
[edit]Verb
[edit]shack up (third-person singular simple present shacks up, present participle shacking up, simple past and past participle shacked up)
- (colloquial) To live together, especially of an unmarried couple.
- 1961 November 10, Joseph Heller, “The Soldier in White”, in Catch-22 […], New York, N.Y.: Simon and Schuster, →OCLC, page 173:
- The only thing I want to do after the war is marry some girl who's got more money than I have and shack up with lots more pretty girls.
- 1980, “Shack Up”, performed by A Certain Ratio:
- So I don't believe in alimony, okay, love? / Though I think we'd ought to / Shack up baby, shack up
- 2011, Pamela Toth, The Mail-Order Mix-Up:
- The other rumor flying around thicker 'n flies on a three-day-old carcass is that new redheaded cook, Rory, is shacked up with you.
Translations
[edit]to live together, especially when unmarried
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