˜yÐÄvlog

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shippon

or ²õ³ó¾±±è·±è±ð²Ô

[ ship-uhn ]

noun

British Dialect.
  1. a cow barn or cattle shed.


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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of shippon1

before 900; Middle English schepon, Old English scypen; cognate with German Schuppen; akin to shop
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Tom, go to th' shippon, and supper the cows.

From

Many a sturdy squire in Lancashire and Shropshire, many a member at Westminster, from Shippon and Sir Watkyn downwards, passed his glass over the water-jug as he drank the King; and if Sophia, as she drew her withered flower from its hiding-place, that it might lie beneath her pillow through the night, prayed for King James and his cause, she did only what many a pretty Jacobite, and some who passed for Whigs, were doing at the same hour.

From

He had his forerunner in the ‘down-right’ Shippon, as Pope calls him, of a Georgian House of Commons.

From

Has the flood washed into the shippon?

From

Inside the quadrangle, for the place had during the past century served as farm instead of hall, barn, cart-shed and shippon were ruinous and empty, but she could fill the space in fancy with sturdy archer, man-at-arms, and corsleted rider, for that the present venerable edifice had been built into an older one the stump of a square tower remained to testify.

From

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