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  1. Dictionary
    shanty
    /ˈʃanti/

    noun

    • 1. a small, crudely built shack.

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. SHANTY definition: 1. a small house, usually made from pieces of wood, metal, or cardboard, in which poor people live…. Learn more.

  3. Shanty definition: a crudely built hut, cabin, or house.. See examples of SHANTY used in a sentence.

  4. : a small crudely built dwelling or shelter usually of wood. Synonyms. Noun (2) cabin. camp. hooch [ slang] hootch. hovel. hutch. hutment. shack. See all Synonyms & Antonyms in Thesaurus. Examples of shanty in a Sentence.

  5. A shanty is a small, rough shelter or dwelling. Modern shanties are commonly found in shantytowns, informal neighborhoods made up of crude, homemade shelters.

  6. A shanty is a small rough hut which poor people live in, built from tin, cardboard, or other materials that are not very strong.

  7. noun. /ˈʃænti/. /ˈʃænti/. (plural shanties) a small house, built of pieces of wood, metal and cardboard, where very poor people live, especially on the edge of a big city. Nearly 20% of the city’s inhabitants live in shanty towns. The whole family lives in a shanty made of wood, mud and tin. Topics Social issues c2.

  8. shanty. noun. 1. shack, shed, cabin, hut, lean-to, hovel, shiel (Scot.), bothy (Scot.), shieling (Scot.) a young population in urban slums and shanties. 2. song, song, air, tune, chant, ballad, hymn, ditty one of my father's favourite sea shanties.

  9. of, relating to, or constituting a shanty or shanties: a shanty quarter outside the town walls. of a low economic or social class, especially when living in a shanty: shanty people. verb (used without object), shan·tied, shan·ty·ing.

  10. A shanty is a small rough hut which poor people live in, built from tin, cardboard, or other materials that are not very strong. 2. A shanty is a song which sailors used to sing while they were doing work on a ship.

  11. Jun 13, 2024 · shanty (plural shanties) A song sailors sing, especially in rhythm to work, to help coordinate hauling (pulling) at the same time, or to set the pace for continuous activities. Synonym: sea shanty. Hypernym: work song.