share, I, 388, B 7; IV, 416, 17: cutting, portion.
shathmont. See shaftmont.
shaw, shawe, I, 422, 3; III, 91, 1; 97, 1; V, [250], 25: wood, thicket. See wode shawe. In Teviotdale shawe is “a piece of ground which becomes suddenly flat at the bottom of a hill or steep bank.” Jamieson. So, perhaps, V, [250], 25.
shaw, sha, show.
shay, V, [110], 8, 9: shy.
she, III, 318, 4: spurious Highland dialect, representing he, they, and even Highlander, for which she, her, hernanesell have become a nickname. (The Gaelic having no word for the neuter it, the masc. e and fem. i do duty for the absent form. i in some Highland districts is largely used in speaking of sexless objects.)
sheaf, shefe, of arrows, III, 3, 5; 62, 131: bundle of twenty-four. Cf. II, 168, 5; III, 13, 9.
shealin, shiel, shielin, shielen, shieling, shield, IV, 258, 23; 259, 17; 260, 16; 262, 27, 29; 266, 17: herdsman’s hut.
shear, III, 307, 6, 8: several. (Scot. seir.)
sheave, shive, n., I, 470, 32; II, 358, 27; 367, 44; V, [16], 13, 14; [18], 3, 4; [219], 25: slice.