How to Use shiver in a Sentence

shiver

1 of 2 verb
  • To walk up on the shore, sit shivering on the sand, and drink it all in.
    Victor Blue, The New Yorker, 21 Dec. 2023
  • As the rest of the nation shivers, Phoenix enjoys a warm up.
    Robert Anglen, The Arizona Republic, 17 Jan. 2024
  • Then Colon started to shiver and shake with a bone-deep cold.
    Jonas Shaffer, Baltimore Sun, 23 Dec. 2022
  • This cashmere knit shows just the right amount of skin that won’t leave you shivering in the cold.
    Harper's BAZAAR, 18 Feb. 2023
  • Ohioans will have to shiver through six more weeks of winter.
    Emily Deletter, The Enquirer, 2 Feb. 2023
  • My body shivered against the weather and my fearful thoughts.
    Sue Williamson, Vogue, 26 Jan. 2024
  • The kittens were cold, unable to shiver or cry, and their eyes were covered in crud.
    Maria Lopez, cleveland, 29 July 2021
  • With my mother shivering in the cold in the middle of winter!!
    Zizi Strater, Peoplemag, 25 Apr. 2023
  • Another, with big sad eyes, shivered as he was pushed in a kids stroller.
    Kim Hjelmgaard, USA TODAY, 6 May 2023
  • Why not a shivering kid with a towel wrapped around his waist?
    Scott Bordow, The Arizona Republic, 11 July 2023
  • Sheeran was dared to shiver and refer to himself in the third person.
    Andrea Towers, EW.com, 9 Nov. 2021
  • According to the fire department that rescued the pet, the dog had stopped shivering and could walk again when the pet left the area.
    Kimberlee Speakman, Peoplemag, 13 Dec. 2023
  • The other, a lanky middle-aged man shivering in jeans and a hoodie, was Tony Hawk.
    Bret Anthony Johnston, The New Yorker, 22 Jan. 2024
  • Even body horror buffs will shiver at the scenes of mutilation and murder in the woods.
    Emy Lacroix, Peoplemag, 29 Sep. 2022
  • Our house began to shiver, and the sidewalk started to patter.
    Bryan Washington, Time, 16 Apr. 2021
  • The Australian Open is a two-week summertime party held when much of the world is shivering.
    Matthew Futterman, New York Times, 1 June 2023
  • And so children come in shivering with fever, and with no acetaminophen, little can be done for them.
    Samar Abu Elouf, New York Times, 15 Nov. 2023
  • Cold air comes muscling in today, changing our overnight rain to snow and then leaving us to shiver all weekend.
    Washington Post, 20 Jan. 2022
  • Old people don’t like to shiver all winter or sweat all summer.
    Amy Dickinson, Chicago Tribune, 16 Mar. 2023
  • Cold water may cause the child to shiver, which would raise their body temperature.
    Adrianna Rodriguez, USA TODAY, 14 Dec. 2022
  • Standing in the cold outside her friend’s apartment with her two shivering little dogs, Casper called the tow yard again.
    Ariane Lange, Sacramento Bee, 2 Feb. 2024
  • In the meantime, stomach-deep in the water, his family shivered.
    Melissa Chan, NBC News, 18 Aug. 2023
  • Askew slept that night in the car — shivering, broken glass everywhere — swapped it out at the rental place in the morning, and turned on the UberEats app again that afternoon.
    Britt Peterson, Washington Post, 16 Oct. 2023
  • Julia stood with her hands clasped, shivering in her party frock.
    Matthew Gavin Frank, Harper's Magazine, 4 May 2023
  • Jihan and her husband stood shivering under floodlights, and were informed that the name of their new home was Al-Hol.
    Anand Gopal, The New Yorker, 11 Mar. 2024
  • Much of the United States is shivering through brutal cold as most of the rest of the world is feeling unusually warm weather.
    Staff Report, Hartford Courant, 17 Jan. 2024
  • The snow was cold enough to creak and shiver beneath my skis, and the yellow birch forest strained the morning sunshine into silvered lines of shadow.
    Washington Post, 13 Jan. 2022
  • Parts of Maine and New Hampshire could shiver through wind chills of 60 degrees below zero, or lower.
    CBS News, 2 Feb. 2023
  • Video shared by the highway patrol showed aerial nighttime video of the moment the shivering teens were found on the bank after scanning the river.
    Greg Norman, Fox News, 25 July 2023
  • For many months, long-period quakes had shivered within the peninsula’s deep crust.
    Robin George Andrews, Quanta Magazine, 20 Feb. 2024
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shiver

2 of 2 noun
  • Nabokov spoke of the shiver between the shoulder blades.
    New York Times, 19 Jan. 2021
  • This realignment caused a shiver to run through the art world.
    Helen Lewis, The Atlantic, 3 Oct. 2022
  • And strange air, dark and gray and silver and soft and very precise, emerges to pool around every pore and shiver of skin.
    Christopher Cokinos, Scientific American, 1 Mar. 2020
  • On our first encounter with it, there’s even a shiver of sinister John Williams in Tesori’s score.
    Zachary Woolfe, New York Times, 29 Oct. 2023
  • If just the idea of stepping outside runs a shiver down your spine, then bring the fun indoors with a game night or shopping trip at the mall.
    Seventeen.com Editors, Seventeen, 12 Jan. 2023
  • An icy shiver passed through Adam: thirty-five years old, learning about vanguards for the first time.
    Matt B. Weir, Harper’s Magazine , 18 Jan. 2022
  • Suddenly, a jaguar’s roar broke the spell, giving us shivers.
    Los Angeles Times, 1 Mar. 2023
  • But even more compelling of a draw was the prospect of cooling down with shivers of ecstatic terror.
    Matt Alt, The New Yorker, 28 Aug. 2023
  • Games have been interrupted by those same air-raid sirens that still send a shiver down Shevchenko’s spine.
    Rory Smith, New York Times, 7 July 2023
  • Central to Japan’s slide was deflation, a term that sends shivers up the spines of economists.
    Peter S. Goodman, New York Times, 11 Aug. 2023
  • The very thought sends shivers all the way down to his anatomically ambiguous crotch flesh pouch.
    David Fear, Rolling Stone, 22 July 2023
  • Decker’s loud cries conveyed her profound pain and sudden fear, sending a shiver down the spines of all who heard them.
    Los Angeles Times, 4 Feb. 2022
  • The seeming callousness with which the dancers burlesque a fourteen-year-old’s death—the breezy way that the dance turns a killing into a sight gag—induces a shiver.
    Jody Rosen, The New Yorker, 7 Dec. 2022
  • There’s a shiver of recognition, an unmooring, a reaching beyond your life only to be left with the sum of your deeds.
    Christopher Borrelli, Chicago Tribune, 23 Mar. 2023
  • And that’s not even counting the looming threat of avian flu, which has sent a shiver through the industry but thankfully hasn’t spread enough to force the killing of Koch’s factory flocks.
    Chloe Sorvino, Forbes, 17 May 2022
  • When the news segment ended and the live coverage resumed, the announcer uttered a series of words that send a shiver down my spine to this day.
    Charles C. W. Cooke, National Review, 10 Sep. 2021
  • The chilly fall breezes can send a shiver down your spine, which can be blocked by an outdoor curtain, depending on what your patio layout is.
    Courtney Campbell, USA TODAY, 25 Aug. 2020
  • There is a mournful chord and an existential shiver in all of her art — life hanging by a filament, mixed with the will to survive.
    Jerry Saltz, Vulture, 6 Apr. 2021
  • Poets have long approached the cold with a shiver of respect, aligning it with the least hospitable, most mysterious kinds of truth.
    Katy Waldman, The New Yorker, 8 Feb. 2022
  • Stephen King has crafted some of the most chilling tales of the past 50 years, but nothing quite sends shivers down the spine like a recent revelation made by the Master of Horror.
    Lester Fabian Brathwaite, EW.com, 6 Sep. 2023
  • Then again, the softer tune makes sure rough pavement is dispatched with a minimum of shakes or shivers making their way into the cabin.
    Andrew Wendler, Car and Driver, 12 June 2023
  • Soon enough, a Caribbean reef shark—sometimes a shiver of sharks—emerges from the deep blue beyond, looping over the heads of the divers and claiming fish from the handler, who feeds the shark using a long metal stick.
    Juli Berwald, Smithsonian Magazine, 1 Sep. 2023
  • Friday’s high temperature was 52 degrees, a slightly chilly reading — but not the sort to send shivers down spines.
    Martin Weil, Washington Post, 2 Dec. 2023
  • Bryan Cranston recently sent a shiver down the Internet’s spine with his talk of retirement and selling his stake in Dos Hombres.
    Brian Davids, The Hollywood Reporter, 7 July 2023
  • Boaters and swimmers off Orange Beach’s Bird Island were startled last weekend when a shiver of hammerhead sharks swam in near shore.
    Warren Kulo | Wkulo@al.com, al, 13 June 2023
  • Head to Hulu and stream a season (or several) of the always-creepy American Horror Story for hours of spine shivers.
    Diana Pearl, Peoplemag, 23 Oct. 2023
  • The engine produces 670 horsepower and has a Ferrari-like howl that'll send shivers down your spine—and have bystanders swiveling in your direction.
    Austin Irwin, Car and Driver, 28 Aug. 2023
  • Four months removed from his 40th birthday, Gould was forced to make the tackle, delivering a right-shoulder shiver, on Amari Rodgers’ 50-yard return down the right sideline in the first quarter.
    Eric Branch, San Francisco Chronicle, 14 Aug. 2022
  • The report sent a shiver of excitement through the ornithological world – and beyond.
    Melanie Stetson Freeman, The Christian Science Monitor, 3 July 2023
  • One day Nosal saw footage from a news helicopter flying over a shiver of sharks, prompting the scientist to order a 6-foot-wide helium balloon for the same birds-eye view.
    Ana Ramirez, San Diego Union-Tribune, 4 Sep. 2023

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'shiver.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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