shab

See also: sħab

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ʃæb/
  • Rhymes: -æb

Etymology 1

From Middle English shabbe, schabbe, from Old English sċeabb, from Proto-West Germanic *skabb, from Proto-Germanic *skabbaz. Doublet of scab.

Noun

shab (countable and uncountable, plural shabs)

  1. (obsolete, UK, dialect) Scabies.
  2. (obsolete, UK, dialect) A scab.

Verb

shab (third-person singular simple present shabs, present participle shabbing, simple past and past participle shabbed)

  1. (obsolete) To scratch; to rub.

Etymology 2

See scab.

Verb

shab (third-person singular simple present shabs, present participle shabbing, simple past and past participle shabbed)

  1. (obsolete, UK, dialect) (Can we verify(+) this sense?) To play mean tricks; to act shabbily.
  2. (obsolete, UK, dialect) To move (something, away or out of the way), to drive off.
    • 1677, W. Howard, Narrative, postscript, T 3 b:
      Certain Nipnets intended to have sheltred themselves under Vncas; but he perceiving it would be distastful to the English, soon shab'd them off.
    • 1698 Farquhar, Love & Bottle, iv. iii:
      I have shabb'd him off purely.
    • ante 1824, in Mactaggart, Gallovid. Encycl., 347:
      They shab'd [] Thomas aff to hell.
    • 1828, Thomas Crofton Croker, Fairy Legends and Traditions of the South of Ireland, page 212:
      [] but when that [money] was gone, and he had not as much ground, that he could call his own, as would sod a lark, they soon shabbed him off.
    • 1840, John Pendleton Kennedy, Quodlibet: Containing Some Annals Thereof ..., page 61:
      I hold the people in too much esteem, to shab them off with any thing of a secondary quality, whilst Providence has blessed me with the means of providing them the best.
  3. (obsolete outside historical fiction, UK, criminal slang) To skulk or sneak away.
    • 1731, The Windsor Medley: Being a Choice Collection of Several Curious and Valuable Pieces in Prose and Verse: that Were Handed about in Print and Manuscript, During the Stay of the Court at Windsor-Castle Last Summer. ..., page 24:
      [] and so the fat Parson shabb'd off, []
    • 2017 February 23, Jake Arnott, The Fatal Tree, Sceptre, →ISBN:
      We bided a moment as the push we were part of moved forward and took the opportunity to slip deftly back through it, thus shabbing off from our prey.

Part or all of this entry has been imported from the 1913 edition of Webster’s Dictionary, which is now free of copyright and hence in the public domain. The imported definitions may be significantly out of date, and any more recent senses may be completely missing.
(See the entry for shab”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.)

Anagrams