Shut vs Scut - What's the difference?
shut | scut |
To close, to stop from being open.
To close, to stop being open.
(transitive, or, intransitive, chiefly, British) To close a business temporarily, or (of a business) to be closed.
To preclude; to exclude; to bar out.
* Dryden
closed
The act or time of shutting; close.
* Milton
A door or cover; a shutter.
The line or place where two pieces of metal are welded together.
A narrow alley]] or [[passageway, passage acting as a short cut through the buildings between two streets.
A short, erect tail, as of a hare or rabbit
rump, pudenda, vulva
* a.'' 1602 , William Shakespeare, ''The Merry Wives of Windsor , V, 4, 19
* a.'' 1968 , Keith Roberts, "The Lady Margaret", in ''Modern Classics of Science Fiction , ed. Gardner R. Dozois, 1993, page 233
* 1997 , Charles Frazier, Cold Mountain
A slut; whore; hussy
* 1954 , Paul Vincent Carroll, The Wise Have Not Spoken , page 49
* a.'' 1989 , Pat Cadigan, "Pretty Boy Crossover", in ''Modern Classics of Science Fiction , ed. Gardner R. Dozois, 1993, page 565
To scamper off
* 1916 , , (Macmillan Press Ltd, paperback, 47)
A contemptible person.
* 1954 , Paul Vincent Carroll, The Wise Have Not Spoken , page 49
* a.'' 1989 , Pat Cadigan, "Pretty Boy Crossover", in ''Modern Classics of Science Fiction , ed. Gardner R. Dozois, 1993, page 565
* 1993 , Brian Friel, Dancing at Lughnasa , page 14
* 2005 , Dean Whitlock, Sky Carver , page 108
Distasteful work; drudgery.
* 1999 , Patricia L. Dawson Forged by the Knife: The Experience of Surgical Residency from the Perspective of a Woman of Color , page 100
* 1999 , Jonathan Kellerman, Billy Straight , page 112
* 2001 , Catherine Miles Wallace, Motherhood in the Balance: Children, Career, Me, and God , page 163
* 2003 , Virginia G. Salazar, Gone: A Sci Fi about Cloning , page 144
* a.'' 2004 , Clark Howard, "The Leper Colony", in ''The World's Finest Mystery and Crime Stories: Fifth Annual Collection , ed. Martin H. Greenberg, 2004
(slang, medicine) Some menial, common unfinished task left for medical students, or some clinically useful training.
As nouns the difference between shut and scut
is that shut is the act or time of shutting; close or shut can be a narrow alley]] or [[passageway|passage acting as a short cut through the buildings between two streets while scut is shield.As a verb shut
is to close, to stop from being open.As an adjective shut
is closed.shut
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) shutten, shetten, from (etyl) .Verb
- Please shut the door.
- The light was so bright I had to shut my eyes.
- If you wait too long, the automatic door will shut .
- The pharmacy is shut on Sunday.
- shut from every shore
Usage notes
Except when part of one of the derived terms listed below, almost every use of shut'' can be replaced by ''close''. The reverse is not true -- there are many uses of ''close'' that cannot be replaced by ''shut .Derived terms
(phrasal verbs derived from shut) * shut away * shut down * shut in * shut off * shut out * shut up (single words and compounds derived from shut) * shutdown, shut-down * shut-eye * shut-in * shutout, shut-out * shutter (idioms derived from shut) * open and shut * shut one's eyes to * shut the door on * shut up shop * shut your face * shut your mouth * shut your trapAdjective
(-)Noun
(en noun)- the shut of a door
- Just then returned at shut of evening flowers.
- (Sir Isaac Newton)
Etymology 2
Variation of (chute) or (shute) (archaic, related to (shoot)) from (etyl) .Noun
(en noun)Synonyms
* (alleyway) alley, gennel (Northern Ireland), ginnel (Yorkshire and Lancashire), gitty (East Midlands), jitty (Midlands), passage, snicket (Northern England), wynd (Scotland)scut
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) .Noun
(en noun)- Mrs. Ford. Sir John ! art thou there, my deer ? my male deer ?
- Falstaff. My doe with the black scut !
- "So ... so she show you her pretty li'l scut , he? [...]."
- One of the sisters backed up to the fire and hiked up the tail of her dress and bent over and thrust out her scut to it and stared at Inman with a look of glazed pleasure in her blue eyes.
- Me scut of a daughter puttin' it on her back in finery. [...]
- "You scut," she said as we hit the entrance ramp of the interstate. "You're a scut -pumping Conservative.
Verb
- "I know why they scut ."
Etymology 2
Probably an alteration of scout (obsolete sense), itself from (etyl) (en)Noun
(en noun)- "[...] Me scut of a daughter puttin' it on her back in finery. [...]"
- "You scut ," she said as we hit the entrance ramp of the interstate. "You're a scut-pumping Conservative."
- Chris. Danny Bradley is a scut , Rose.
- Rose. I never said it was Danny Bradley!
- Chris. He's a married man with three young children.
- "Fat-headed scut'. That's what he is, ' scut . Thinks he runs the whole river."
Etymology 3
From (etyl) shoute, scoute, skoute, shute, schuit (=modern Dutch), scut - "flat-bottomed boat, barge; the master of a shoute''; also, a sailor on a ''shoute ."Noun
(en noun)- "[...] [Female residents] are berated more on rounds, given more scut to do. [...]"
- "Let's devote mornings to the scut , do real work in the afternoon. [....]"
- And the scut' of weeding or washing clothes or waiting in the dentist's waiting room or the soccer field parking lot is actually far less brutalizing than the ' scut of grading freshman essays [....]
- "What if you were called a scut' puppy?' "When I first started I was one. A ' scut puppy is usually a medical student or a nurse who does menial tasks.
page 445
- "[....] So they give the people assigned to the Probation Squad every scut case that other squads don't want to handle."