yes
The present participle is shaking.
It means they start shaking and they cannot stop, or they shake and keep shaking repeatedly.
The plates under the surface of the earth shift, some of them grind together causing the shaking.
The adverb form of "shake" is "shakily."
If you are shaking then the emotions that make your shake could be nervous, excited or very angry.
shaking
Vinegar and oil will separate. Shaking it mixes them together.
there is no cream in cream crackers
The past continuous is 'I was shaking'. The past perfect is 'I had shaken'. The past perfect continuous is 'I had been shaking'
A dry shake involves shaking cocktail ingredients without ice first, then shaking again with ice. This helps create a frothier texture. A wet shake involves shaking ingredients with ice from the start, resulting in a colder and more diluted drink.
Two: shake-ing
Acronym for 'shake my head' or 'shaking my head.' Usually used when someone finds something so stupid, no words can do it justice. Sometimes it's modified to 'smfh' or 'smmfh' by those that prefer profanity in their internet acronyms.