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  1. Dictionary
    shed
    /ʃɛd/

    verb

    • 1. (of a tree or other plant) allow (leaves or fruit) to fall to the ground: "both varieties shed leaves in winter"
    • 2. discard (something undesirable, superfluous, or outdated): "many firms use relocation as an opportunity to shed jobs" Similar dismisslet godischargegive someone their noticeOpposite hiretake onadoptkeep

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. SHED definition: 1. a small building, usually made of wood, used for storing things: 2. a large, simple building…. Learn more.

  3. The meaning of SHED is to rid oneself of temporarily or permanently as superfluous or unwanted. How to use shed in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Shed.

  4. Shed definition: a simple or rude structure built for shelter, storage, etc.. See examples of SHED used in a sentence.

  5. n. 1. An elevation in the earth's surface from which water flows in two directions; a watershed. 2. Something, such as an exoskeleton or outer skin, that has been shed or sloughed. 3. The space made by raising certain warp threads on a loom and lowering others, allowing the woof to be passed between them. Idioms: shed blood. 1.

  6. to release a virus or bacterium from a cell or body into the environment where it can infect other people: Those who have contracted the new coronavirus shed the virus most heavily in the first few days of the illness. People shed the virus in respiratory droplets and aerosols. More examples. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  7. 1. a small building or lean-to of light construction, used for storage, shelter, etc. 2. a large roofed structure, esp one with open sides, used for storage, repairing locomotives, sheepshearing, etc. 3.

  8. The small, simple building in your yard where you keep tools or gardening equipment is a shed. As a noun, shed means "hut," and probably comes from the word shade. But shed is also a verb meaning "to cast off," like when a snake sheds its skin.

  9. Something, such as an exoskeleton or outer skin, that has been shed or sloughed. American Heritage A small, rough building or lean-to, used for shelter or storage, as a workshop, etc.

  10. shed something (formal) to have the quality of causing water or liquid to run off and not sink in. A duck's feathers shed water immediately. Word Origin.

  11. Jun 25, 2024 · shed (third-person singular simple present sheds, present participle shedding, simple past and past participle shedded) ( transitive ) To place or allocate a vehicle, such as a locomotive , in or to a depot or shed.