Shade
Source : Wright, Joseph English Dialect Dictionary web : https://eddonline4-proj.uibk.ac.at/edd/main.html
SHADE, sb.1 Irel. Nhb. Yks. Lan. Chs. Midl. Der. Lin. Wor. Shr. Som. Cor. Also written shaid Cor.; and in forms shaad Cor.; shad Wor. Shr.1 [ʃēd, ʃeəd.] A shed; a lean-to; a lightly-constructed wooden building. N.I.1 Nhb.1 Cairt shade. n.Yks. (T.S.), n.Yks.1 n.Yks.4, ne.Yks.1 e.Yks. Marshall Rur. Econ. (1788); e.Yks.1 w.Yks. All th' fowk 'at work at th' shade have promised to deal wi' us, Hartley Clock Alm. (1878) 36; w.Yks.3 w.Yks.5 Lan. Every loom i' th' shade's running now, Clegg Sketches (1895) 157. ne.Lan.1, s.Lan.1, Chs.1 Midl. Marshall Rur. Econ. (1796) II. nw.Der.1 n.Lin.1 It's under the harra's in the sand shaade. Wor. (W.C.B.) Shr.1 Pŭt them turmits i' the shad. w.Som.1 Cor. I wor in thy shaad, Exhibition (1873) 78. e.Cor. I've bin an' ful'd the shaid, Daniel Poems.
SHADE, sb.1 Irel. Nhb. Yks. Lan. Chs. Midl. Der. Lin. Wor. Shr. Som. Cor. Also written shaid Cor.; and in forms shaad Cor.; shad Wor. Shr.1 [ʃēd, ʃeəd.] A shed; a lean-to; a lightly-constructed wooden building. N.I.1 Nhb.1 Cairt shade. n.Yks. (T.S.), n.Yks.1 n.Yks.4, ne.Yks.1 e.Yks. Marshall Rur. Econ. (1788); e.Yks.1 w.Yks. All th' fowk 'at work at th' shade have promised to deal wi' us, Hartley Clock Alm. (1878) 36; w.Yks.3 w.Yks.5 Lan. Every loom i' th' shade's running now, Clegg Sketches (1895) 157. ne.Lan.1, s.Lan.1, Chs.1 Midl. Marshall Rur. Econ. (1796) II. nw.Der.1 n.Lin.1 It's under the harra's in the sand shaade. Wor. (W.C.B.) Shr.1 Pŭt them turmits i' the shad. w.Som.1 Cor. I wor in thy shaad, Exhibition (1873) 78. e.Cor. I've bin an' ful'd the shaid, Daniel Poems.
SHADE, sb.2 Sc. Nhb. Hmp. Also in form shad Nhb.1 [ʃēd.] An open piece of ground; a pool; esp. on a hill-top; a cultivated field. Fif. They're fu' glad to gather singles on the shade, Douglas Poems (1806) 123. Nhb.1 He raced through reise and shad, Minstrelsy Eng. Border (1847) 421. Hmp. A ‘shade’ still means an open piece of ground, or a pool; generally it is on the top of a hill. When they say the cattle come ‘to shade’ they mean that they seek a spot where they are open to the cooling influences of water and breeze, Cornh. Mag. (June 1893) 591; Hmp.1
SHADE, sb.3 Der. A kind of mantle. Lydia appeared in her black ‘shade,’ Verney Stone Edge (1868) vii.
SHADE, sb.4 Sh.I. Suf. Also written shaed Sh.I. [ʃēd.]
- A sheath, esp. a sheath for knitting-pins. Cf. shed, sb.2 1. Sh.I. Shü held her shaed an' wirsit in her haand, Sh. News (May 19, 1900); (J.S.) Suf. (Hall.) Hence Shaed-knife, sb. a knife carried in a sheath. Sh.I. Shü set her fit apo' da skate, an' begood ta cut him in tags wi' my auld shaed knife, Sh. News (May 28, 1898); (J.S.)
- The sheath of a horse, the praeputium. Suf. (C.L.F.) Cf. shed, sb.2 2.
SHADE, v.1 and sb.5 Nhb. Dur. Yks. Chs. Nhp. War. Dor. and Amer. [ʃēd, ʃeəd.] 1. v. To shelter. w.Yks. (J.W.) Chs.1 Th' plants'll grow weel uppo yon bed; it's shaded from th' east wynd; Chs.3 2. To take shelter. s.Chs.1 Ahy shai·did ùn·dŭr ŭ trey. 3. sb. In comb. Shade's-man, a fisherman who hides under some shelter while fishing with ground-bait. Nhb. Coquetdale Sngs. (1852) 116. 4. Phr. in the shade, of a person: suffering from some stigma on the character. Nhp.1, War.3 5. A shadow. Dor. I zid you kissing his shade, Hardy Tess (1891) 174, ed. 1895. 6. A thin window-curtain; a blind. e.Dur.1 ‘Shades cleaned at 1s. 9d. the pair,’ painted on a laundry-cart in Sunderland. ‘Window-curtain,’ when used, only refers to that kind which is strung across the lower half of a window. n.Yks.4 New shades foor ivvery windther i' t'hoos. w.Yks. Sheffield Indep. (1874). [Amer. The window blinds, or shades, were of stiff grey paper, and had to be rolled up by hand from below, Roper Track and Trail (1891) iii.]
SHADE, v.2 and sb.6 Sc. Irel. n.Cy. Nhb. Yks. Wor. Sus. [ʃēd, ʃeəd.] 1. v. To divide; to part asunder; esp. to part the hair with a comb. Cf. shed, v.2 Cai. To have her hair combed and shaded, McLennan Peasant Life (1871) 1st S. 265. Gall. He'd shade the binwud door aside, And through the wunnock sleely peep, Mactaggart Encycl. (1824) 116, ed. 1876. Nhb.1 Get the reddin kyem an' shade yor hair. se.Wor.1 Akere look, Sally; thee just shade thee 'air, and nat look sich a great mawkin. 2. To shed. n.Cy. (Hall.) 3. sb. A detached portion; a piece of broken tile or pottery. Cf. shard, sb.1 Nhb.1 Shades of ice [detached pieces of ice floating loosely about]. Sus.1 Sus.2 4. A parting in the hair. Sc. (A.W.) Ant. Wull ye tell me if that's a straight shade? Ballymena Obs. (1892). N.I.1 Dwn. He put a strecht shade in his hair, Lyttle Ballycuddy (1892) 26. Nhb.1 5. The opening between two lines of warp, through which the shuttle passes. w.Yks.3 [4. Schade of the here, discrimen, Harl. MS. (c. 1450) in Wright's Voc. (1884) 631.]
SHADE, see Shard, sb.2
SHADE, sb.6 4. n.Cum. (J.H.H.)
SHADE, v.1 n.Der. To take shelter from rain. (S.B.)
SHADED, ppl. adj. Hmp. [ʃē·did.] Of an animal, esp. a pig: having a broad band round the middle of the body of a different colour from the rest of the skin. De Crespigny New Forest (1895) 113.
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SHADE, sb.2 Sc. Nhb. Hmp. Also in form shad Nhb.1 [ʃēd.] An open piece of ground; a pool; esp. on a hill-top; a cultivated field.
SHADE, v.1 and sb.5 Nhb. Dur. Yks. Chs. Nhp. War. Dor. and Amer. [ʃēd, ʃeəd.]
- sb. In comb. Shade's-man, a fisherman who hides under some shelter while fishing with ground-bait. Nhb.
SHADE, v.2 and sb.6 Sc. Irel. n.Cy. Nhb. Yks. Wor. Sus. [ʃēd, ʃeəd.]
- The opening between two lines of warp, through which the shuttle passes. w.Yks.3
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