Shord. See Shard.
Shore. n. The edge of a ditch on the meadow side (Wild Life, ch. xviii).—N.W.
'A Mearstone lyinge within the Shoore of the Dyche.'—Perambulation of the Great Park of Fasterne, 1602.
Shot, or Shut of, to be. To rid one's self of a thing. 'Her can't get shut o' thuck there vool of a bwoy.'-N. & S.W.
Shoulder, to put out the. At Clyffe Pypard and Hilmarton it is customary to ask a man whose banns have been published once, 'How his shoulder is?'—because you have heard that it has been 'put out o' one side,' owing to his having 'vallen plump out o' the pulput laas' Zunday.' Next Sunday will 'put'n straight agean.' This implies that the banns were formerly published from the pulpit.—N.W.
Showl. A shovel (A.B.D.); occasionally a spade (D.).—N. & S.W.
Shrammed. Chilled to the bone, benumbed, perished with cold (A.B.M.S.).—N. & S.W.
'I was half-shrammed (i.e. perished with cold) on the downs.—Monthly Mag. 1814.
Shrift. See Shaft-tide.