Idiom
Shake a leg.
To go fast, hurry.
Dictionary
Shake a leg
verb
To get busy; to get going; to be productive.
Ai Feedback
The phrase "Shake a leg" is correct and is used in written English.
It is slang for "hurry up" or "get a move on." For example, you could say, "I need you to shake a leg, we're running late!".
Exact(16)
Shake a leg! Get a move on!
"Platt, shake a leg".
AC/DC advised you to shake a leg.
A WOMAN'S VOICE: Ullo, Mike!... DRISCOLL: Shake a leg an' come abord thin.
Black Sun announced the desire of the London underground to shake a leg once again.
"Watch producers try and bite it," smirks Wiley seconds later on Shake a Leg.
Similar(42)
Box 016960, Miami, FL 33101: and Shake-A-Leg Aquatic Center for the Abled and Disabled; 2620 South Bayshore Dr., Coconut Grove, FL 33133.
Mr. Montaner's island sits in sight of Miami City Hall, surrounded by the marina, a restaurant and Shake-a-Leg Miami, which teaches disabled people and poor children how to sail.
Shake-a-Leg sailors like to visit Mr. Montaner and explore his hideaway, as do members of the Coconut Grove Children's Environmental Group, who clean the other islands and look to his as a model.
But talking heads – including Shirley Williams and Christopher Hitchens – are choreographed here, and no one escapes shaking a leg.
He is seated at a corner table in the cavernous breakfast room of the Pierre hotel, across the street from Central Park, shaking a leg nervously and whispering in a conspiratorial hush.
Related(3)
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com