Meaning of Shire | Babel Free
ʃaɪəDefinitions
- A surname.
- An administrative area or district between about the 5th to the 11th century, subdivided into hundreds or wapentakes and jointly governed by an ealdorman and a sheriff; also, a present-day area corresponding to such a historical district; a county; especially (England), a county having a name ending in -shire.
- A placename
- The people living in a shire (noun sense 1.1) considered collectively.
- A river in Malawi and Mozambique
- The general area in which a person comes from or lives.
- An administrative area or district in other countries.
- An outer suburban or rural local government area which elects its own council.
-
Ellipsis of shire horse (“a draught horse of a tall British breed, usually bay, black, or grey”). abbreviation, alt-of, ellipsis
- A district or province governed by a person; specifically (Christianity), the province of an archbishop, the see of a bishop, etc.
- A region; also, a country.
Equivalents
العربية
المقاطعة
Bosanski
sir
Català
comtat
Čeština
hrabství
Cymraeg
sir
Dansk
grevskab
Deutsch
Grafschaft
Esperanto
graflando
Français
comte
Gaeilge
sir
Galego
condado
עברית
פלך
Hrvatski
sir
Magyar
megye
Íslenska
skíri
Italiano
contea
ქართული
საგრაფო
한국어
셔
Latina
comitatus
Nederlands
graafschap
Polski
hrabstwo
Português
condado
Српски
sir
Svenska
grevskap
Examples
“Yorkshire is the largest shire in England.”
“I thanke his grace he hath appointed him, / Chiefe colonell of all thoſe companies / Muſtred in London, and the ſhires about, / To ſerue his highneſſe in thoſe warres of France: […]”
“But thus I do conjecture it to be, That at the firſt Unitining^([sic – meaning Uniting?]) of the Heptarchy of the Saxons, and the Shiring out of the Kingdom, it vvas divided into Shires, and the Shires again into Hundreds, as it fell out, in ſome more, in ſome leſs: VVhich Shires (as I have ſaid) the King gave to ſuch as he pleaſed, and to their Heirs, to hold of him by an Earls Fee.”
“In August, 1642, the sword was at length drawn; and soon, in almost every shire of the kingdom, two hostile factions appeared in arms against each other.”
“Mrs. Heywood tells me that there are many Catholics among the lower classes in Lancashire and Cheshire,—probably the descendants of retainers of the old Catholic nobility and gentry, who are more numerous in these shires than in other parts of England.”
“As through the wild green hills of Wyre / The train ran, changing sky and shire, / […] / My hand lay empty on my knee. / Aching on my knee it lay: / That morning half a shire away / So many an honest fellow's fist / Had wellnigh wrung it from the wrist.”
“The early history of the shire is hard to trace. Already in the ninth century it seems to have been the core administrative division within Wessex. Originally each shire was overseen by an ealdorman, who was charged with raising levies and perhaps also overseeing the local court (though the evidence is scant on the latter point). At the heart of the shire lay the local assembly (the ‘shire court’), at which such business was conducted.”
“You, my love, are a little paragon—positively a little jewel—You have more brains than half the shire— […]”
“When are you coming back to the shire?”
“[T]his old Evil-queſtioning asked the Doubters if they vvere all of a Tovvn, (he knevv that they vvere all of one Kingdom)? and they anſvvered no, nor not of one Shire neither; […]”
“A third Seignorie or Shire there is that goeth to Apamia, vvhich in old time vvas called Celænæ, and aftervvards Ciboron: […]”
“And Thyatira. It is a Citie of Lydia which is a ſhyre of Aſia the leſſe, the habitation of the Macedones, and of ſome the laſt Citie of the Myſians.”
“His blazing eyes, like tvvo bright ſhining ſhieldes, / Did burne vvith vvrath, and ſparkled liuing fyre; / As tvvo broad Beacons, ſett in open fieldes, / Send forth their flames far of to euery ſhyre, […]”
CEFR level
C2
Mastery
This word is part of the CEFR C2 vocabulary — mastery level.
This word is part of the CEFR C2 vocabulary — mastery level.
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