A woman employed in a shop.
Somewhat worn or damaged by having been kept for a time in a shop.
Duty paid for goods brought on shore.
To set on shore.
Having no shore or coast; of indefinite or unlimited extent; as, a shoreless ocean.
See Shorling.
One who, or that which, shores or props; a prop; a shore.
Toward the shore.
The act of supporting or strengthening with a prop or shore.
See Schorl, Schorlaceous.
The skin of a sheen after the fleece is shorn off, as distinct from the morling, or skin taken from the dead sheep; also, a sheep of the first year's shearing.
p. p. of Shear.
To fail; to decrease.
Having short-breath, or quick respiration.
To join, as the electrodes of a battery or dynamo or any two points of a circuit, by a conductor of low resistance.
Having little time to run from the date.
Short of, or lacking the regular number of, servants or helpers.
Having short intervals between the joints; -- said of a plant or an animal, especially of a horse whose pastern is too short.
Not living or lasting long; being of short continuance; as, a short-lived race of beings; short-lived pleasure; short-lived passion.
Speaking in a quick or short manner; hence, gruff; curt.
Having a short waist.
Affected with shortness of breath; having a quick, difficult respiration, as dyspnoic and asthmatic persons.
Having little wit; not wise; having scanty intellect or judgment.
Amount or extent of deficiency, as determined by some requirement or standard; as, a shortage in money accounts.
An unsweetened breakfast cake shortened with butter or lard, rolled thin, and baked.
Coverings for the legs of men or boys, consisting of trousers which reach only to the knees, -- worn with long stockings.
The act of falling, or coming short The failure of a crop, or the like. Neglect of, or failure in, performance of duty.
To become short or shorter; as, the day shortens in northern latitudes from June to December; a metallic rod shortens by cold.
One who, or that which, shortens.
The act of making or becoming short or shorter.
A compendious and rapid method or writing by substituting characters, abbreviations, or symbols, for letters, words, etc.; short writing; stenography. See Illust. under Phonography.
A sucking whale less than one year old; -- so called by sailors.
One of a breed of large, heavy domestic cattle having short horns. The breed was developed in England.
In a short or brief time or manner; soon; quickly.
The quality or state of being short; want of reach or extension; brevity; deficiency; as, the shortness of a journey; the shortness of the days in winter; the shortness of an essay; the shortness of the memory; a shortness of provisions; shortness of breath.
Not able to see far; nearsighted; myopic. See Myopic, and Myopia.
The player stationed in the field bewtween the second and third bases.
Any one of several species of small wrenlike Asiatic birds having short wings and a short tail. They belong to Brachypterix, Callene, and allied genera.
Lying near the shore.
A linguistic family or stock of North American Indians, comprising many tribes, which extends from Montana and Idaho into Mexico. In a restricted sense the name is applied especially to the Snakes, the most northern of the tribes.
To load with shot, as a gun.
A person tolerated only because he pays the shot, or reckoning, for the rest of the company, otherwise a mere clog on them.
Free from charge or expense; hence, unpunished; scot-free.
Impenetrable by shot.
A fish resembling the trout.
A light, smooth-bored gun, often double-barreled, especially designed for firing small shot at short range, and killing small game.
The refuse of cattle taken from a drove.
Loaded with shot.
Having ejected the spawn; as, a shotten herring.
See Shoo.
Used as an auxiliary verb, to express a conditional or contingent act or state, or as a supposition of an actual fact; also, to express moral obligation (see Shall); e. g.: they should have come last week; if I should go; I should think you could go.
To push with the shoulder; to make one's way, as through a crowd, by using the shoulders; to move swaying the shoulders from side to side.
Sprained in the shoulder, as a horse.
Having shoulders; -- used in composition; as, a broad-shouldered man.
A loud burst of voice or voices; a vehement and sudden outcry, especially of a multitudes expressing joy, triumph, exultation, or animated courage.
One who shouts.
p. p. of Shove.
The same as Shovelboard.
To take up and throw with a shovel; as, to shovel earth into a heap, or into a cart, or out of a pit.
Having a broad, flat nose; as, the shovel-nosed duck, or shoveler.
Shoveler.
The shoveler.
A board on which a game is played, by pushing or driving pieces of metal or money to reach certain marks; also, the game itself. Called also shuffleboard, shoveboard, shovegroat, shovelpenny.
One who, or that which, shovels.
As much as a shovel will hold; enough to fill a shovel.
A shark (Sphryna tiburio) allied to the hammerhead, and native of the warmer parts of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans; -- called also bonnet shark.
The common sand shark. See under Snad. A small California shark (Heptranchias maculatus), which is taken for its oil. A Pacific Ocean shark (Hexanchus corinus). A ganoid fish of the Sturgeon family (Scaphirhynchus platyrhynchus) of the Mississippi and Ohio rivers; -- called also white sturgeon.
p. p. of Shove.
The act of showing, or bringing to view; exposure to sight; exhibition.
Bread of exhibition; loaves to set before God; -- the term used in translating the various phrases used in the Hebrew and Greek to designate the loaves of bread which the priest of the week placed before the Lord on the golden table in the sanctuary. They were made of fine flour unleavened, and were changed every Sabbath. The loaves, twelve in number, represented the twelve tribes of Israel. They were to be eaten by the priests only, and in the Holy Place.
To rain in showers; to fall, as in a hower or showers.
Full of showers.
Quality of being showery.
Rainless; freo from showers.
Raining in showers; abounding with frequent showers of rain.
In a showy manner; pompously; with parade.
The quality or state of being showy; pompousness; great parade; ostentation.
Appearance; display; exhibition.
Showy; ostentatious.
One who exhibits a show; a proprietor of a show.
p. p. of Show.
A room or apartment where a show is exhibited.
Making a show; attracting attention; presenting a marked appearance; ostentatious; gay; gaudy.
To trim, as trees; to lop.
One who lops; one who trims trees.
To cause to shrink or shrivel with cold; to benumb.
imp. of Shrink.
A place baited with chaff to entice birds.
Applied as an appellation to a kind of shell invented by Gen. H. Shrapnel of the British army. A shrapnel shell; shrapnel shells, collectively.
To cut or tear into small pieces, particularly narrow and long pieces, as of cloth or leather.
The fieldfare; -- so called from its harsh cry before rain.
The act of cutting or tearing into shreds.
Consisting of shreds.
Having no shreds; without a shred.
To beshrew; to curse.
Inclining to shrew; disposing to curse or scold; hence, vicious; malicious; evil; wicked; mischievous; vexatious; rough; unfair; shrewish.
having the qualities of a shrew; having a scolding disposition; froward; peevish.
A shrew; especially, the erd shrew.
A sharp, shrill outcry or scream; a shrill wild cry such as is caused by sudden or extreme terror, pain, or the like.
One who utters a shriek.
Of or pertaining to a sheriff.
The office, or sphere of jurisdiction, of a sheriff; sheriffalty.
To shrive; to question.
The act of shriving.
A shriek; shrieking.
Any one of numerous species of oscinine birds of the family Laniidae, having a strong hooked bill, toothed at the tip. Most shrikes are insectivorous, but the common European gray shrike (Lanius excubitor), the great northern shrike (Lanius borealis), and several others, kill mice, small birds, etc., and often impale them on thorns, and are, on that account called also butcher birds. See under Butcher.
To utter or express in a shrill tone; to cause to make a shrill sound.
Having a throat which produces a shrill note.
Having a shrill voice.
The quality or state of being shrill.
Somewhat shrill.
Any one of numerous species of macruran Crustacea belonging to Crangon and various allied genera, having a slender body and long legs. Many of them are used as food. The larger kinds are called also prawns. See Illust. of Decapoda. In a more general sense, any species of the macruran tribe Caridea, or any species of the order Schizopoda, having a similar form. In a loose sense, any small crustacean, including some amphipods and even certain entomostracans; as, the fairy shrimp, and brine shrimp. See under Fairy, and Brine.
One who fishes for shrimps.
To enshrine; to place reverently, as in a shrine.
a member of the Ancient Arabic Order of Nobles of the Mystic Shrine. See shrine{4}.
The act shrinking; shrinkage; contraction; also, recoil; withdrawal.
The act of shrinking; a contraction into less bulk or measurement.
One who shrinks; one who withdraws from danger.
a. n. from Shrink.
In a shrinking manner.
same as shrink-wrap, n..