shaw

See also: Shaw

English

Alternative forms

  • shawe (13th-17th centuries)

Etymology

Old English sceaga, scaga. Cognate with Old Norse skógr (forest, wood), whence Danish skov (forest).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /ʃɔː/

Noun

shaw (plural shaws)

  1. (dated) A thicket; a small wood or grove.
    • 1485, Sir Thomas Malory, chapter xxxix, in Le Morte Darthur, book IX:
      Thenne said sire kay I requyre you lete vs preue this aduenture / I shal not fayle you said sir Gaherys / and soo they rode that tyme tyl a lake / that was that tyme called the peryllous lake / And there they abode vnder the shawe of the wood
    • 1936, Alfred Edward Housman, More Poems, V, lines 1-2
      The snows are fled away, leaves on the shaws, / And grasses in the mead renew their birth,
  2. (Scotland) The leaves and tops of vegetables, especially potatoes and turnips.
    • 1932, Lewis Grassic Gibbon, Sunset Song, Polygon, 2006 (A Scots Quair), p.35:
      Up here the hills were brave with the beauty and the heat of it, but the hayfield was still all a crackling dryness and in the potato park beyond the biggings the shaws drooped red and rusty already.

Translations

Anagrams


Scots

Etymology

From Middle English schewen, schawen, scheawen, from Old English scēawian, from Proto-Germanic *skawwōną, from Proto-Indo-European *(s)kewh₁-.

Noun

shaw (plural shaws)

  1. A show.

Verb

shaw (third-person singular present shaws, present participle shawin, past shawt, past participle shawt)

  1. To show.
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