Shaw vs Pshaw - What's the difference?
shaw | pshaw |
(label) A thicket; a small wood or grove.
*:
*:Thenne said sire kay I requyre you lete vs preue this aduenture / I shal not fayle you said sir Gaherys / and soo they rode that tyme tyl a lake / that was that tyme called the peryllous lake / And there they abode vnder the shawe of the wood
*1936 , (Alfred Edward Housman), More Poems , V, lines 1-2
(label) The leaves and tops of vegetables, especially potatoes and turnips.
*1932 , (Lewis Grassic Gibbon), Sunset Song'', Polygon, 2006 (''A Scots Quair ), p.35:
*:Up here the hills were brave with the beauty and the heat of it, but the hayfield was still all a crackling dryness and in the potato park beyond the biggings the shaws drooped red and rusty already.
Indicating disapproval, irritation, impatience or disbelief.
* 1823 — , ch. 13
* 1838-1839 — , ch. 56
* 1891 — , ch. xxiii
* 1992 - Wayne Campbell,
As a noun shaw
is a thicket; a small wood or grove.As a proper noun Shaw
is an English topographic surname for someone who lived by a small wood or copse.As an interjection pshaw is
indicating disapproval, irritation, impatience or disbelief.As a verb pshaw is
to express disgust or contempt.shaw
English
Alternative forms
* shaweNoun
(en noun)- The snows are fled away, leaves on the shaws , / And grasses in the mead renew their birth,
Anagrams
* ----pshaw
English
Interjection
(en interjection)- Pshaw! I can't believe it!
- "Pshaw ! Why do ye bother yourself wid texts, man, about so small a matter?" interrupted the landlady
- 'Pshaw !' Ralph muttered, forcing a laugh.
- "Have a care, cousin," he whispered; "for the sake of the Virgin have a care, for you have angered him."
- "Pshaw ! fear not," the other answered in the same low tone.
- "Pshaw ! And monkeys might fly out of my butt."
