释义 |
▪ I. shood, shude dial.|ʃuːd| Also 7 shud, 9 shewd. [Prob. cogn. w. MLG. schode, MHG. schôte, mod.G. schote husk, pod of peas or beans, f. *skeu- to cover; the OE. form may have been *scéod (sceōd) corresponding formally to ON. skjóð fem., skin bag.] The husk of oats after threshing. Usually in pl. Also † = shive n.2
1601Holland Pliny xix. i. II. 4 But what shall bee done with all the hard refuse [from the flax],..the short shuds or shives that are either driven from the rest in the knocking, or parted in the hetchelling. 1691Ray N.C. Words (ed. 2) 62 Shoods, Oat-hulls; Darbish. 1829J. Hunter Hallamsh. Gloss., Shewds, the outer coat of oats, sometimes called shiffs. 1879G. F. Jackson Shropsh. Word-bk., Shoods, husks of oats,—‘this wutmil's full o' shoods’. 1886Cheshire Gloss., Shudes, husks of oats, sifted from the meal. Bacon is often stowed away in a chest amongst shoods. ▪ II. shood, shooe obs. ff. shod a., shoe. |