Raise shoulders

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Robbadob

Junior Member
Joined
Feb 25, 2020
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Interested in Language
Native Language
Spanish
Home Country
Spain
Current Location
Colombia
What do you call when someone raises their shoulders in indifference? Shrug?
 
It's a shrug.
 
The verb is to shrug.
 
And the noun is "a shrug".
 
Is my sentence correct?
Recent news of presumable money laundering at Caesars Palace, provoked little more than a dismissive shrug of shoulders.
 
Is my sentence correct?
Recent news of presumable money laundering at Caesars Palace [no comma] provoked little more than a dismissive shrug [STRIKE]of shoulders[/STRIKE].
It is now.
 
What do you mean by presumable?
 
Is it the wrong word here? How about "possible"?
 
Do these work?
1. Recent news of alleged money laundering at Caesars Palac
e provoked little more than a dismissive shrug.
2. Recent news of what is presumably money laundering at Caesars Palace provoked little more than a dismissive shrug.

Not a teacher
 
No.1 sounds better. No.2 is wordy but not wrong.
 
There is a difference between "alleged money laundering" and "what is presumably money laundering".
 
Do these work?
1. Recent news of alleged money laundering at Caesars Palac
e provoked little more than a dismissive shrug.
2. Recent news of what is presumably money laundering at Caesars Palace provoked little more than a dismissive shrug.

Not a teacher

They're OK. (The place where I would most expect to see them (especially the first one) would, in fact, be a news article.
 
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