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A Writer's Dictionary:

shell out Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with S » sheepwalk ... shifty » shell out


shell
noun
    1. bot.
      The hard protective structure covering the seed or fruit of some plants.
      Thesaurus: husk, pod, case, casing.
    2. zool.
      The hard protective structure covering the body of certain animals, especially shellfish, snails and tortoises.
    3. The hard protective structure covering an egg.
    4. The empty covering of eg a shellfish, found on the seashore.
    5. Any hard protective cover.
    6. A round of ammunition for a large-bore gun, eg a mortar.
    7. A shotgun cartridge.
    8. An empty framework or outer case, especially the early stages of construction or the undestroyed remains of something, eg a building.
      Thesaurus: hull, skeleton, structure, framework, chassis.
    9. computing.
      A program that acts as a user-friendly interface between an operating system and the user.
    10. chem.
      One of a series of concentric spheres representing the possible orbits of electrons as they revolve around the nucleus of an atom.
    11. A type of light racing boat.
verb shelled, shelling
    1. To remove the shell from something.
      Thesaurus: strip, peel, husk, shuck (US), exfoliate.
    2. To bombard with (eg mortar) shells.
      Example: They shelled the city all night
      Thesaurus: bomb, attack, bombard, barrage, strike.
Idiom: come out of one's shell
    To cease to be shy and become more friendly or sociable.
Etymology: Anglo-Saxon scell.

Phrasal Verb: shell out or shell out for something
    To pay out (money) or spend (money) on it.
      Example: I had to shell out a fortune for it


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