0 moving with quick, short movements from side to side, not in a controlled way: --
1 upset: --
5 moving with quick, short movements from side to side, not in a controlled way: --
Already shaky ministerial chairs now wobble precariously.
Elvis could certainly tease the audience at live shows once he became famous, but the movements that caused so much controversy in the 1950s were always shaky and ambiguous.
In fact, the information is often shaky.
To his disappointment, however, they handed out merely a set of definitions based on the old, shaky, thin philosophical languages that were not adhered to in practice.
Both countries passed through shaky periods of transition from military to democratic rule and both are presidentialist systems, where newly-elected presidents ushered in an era of economic liberalisation and stabilisation.
The altered body becomes an unknown terrain that must be relearned ; it becomes shaky ground on which a new order - if there is to be order - must be built.
Both the possibility of forgery and the shaky ground upon which this bank, like many, found itself speak to the extent of widespread economic vulnerability in the period.
The accounts discussed earlier share a common feature: they dismiss crime outright as a potential explanation, but the grounds on which they refute crime are shaky.