0 past simple and past participle of shuttle --
1 to travel or take people regularly between the same two places: --
A bus shuttles constantly between the terminal and the runways.
Gone will be the days when patients were shuttled back and forth on trolleys and in ambulances between the royal infirmary and the wards of the city general.
In its first year of operation about 13 million vehicle passengers are likely to be shuttled through the tunnel, and many more will make rail journeys on through trains.
A system that does not depend on huge volumes of public money being shuttled from one country to another is much less likely to be corrupt.
Disabled patients or clients are often shuttled from pillar to post as they have become a non-priority group.
Five million files a year were already being shuttled between local authorities.
Children in those circumstances have quite enough to cope with without being shuttled about at the whim of their parents.
They have been shuttled from one holding operation to the next.
These people cannot be shuttled about in the system as they grow more frail and elderly—or, indeed, become less profitable.