shed – verb

shed

/ ʃed /


Verb Forms:

Present Simple:

I / you / we / they:

shed

/ʃed/

he / she / it:

sheds

/ʃedz/

Past Simple:

shed

/ʃed/

Past Participle:

shed

/ʃed/

-ing form:

shedding

/ˈʃedɪŋ/


[shed something (often used in newspapers)]

[get rid of]

to get rid of something that is no longer wanted.

se livrar de algo que não é mais desejado.

  • The factory is shedding a large number of jobs.
  • A fábrica está eliminando um grande número de empregos.
  • a quick way to shed unwanted pounds (= extra weight or fat on your body)
  • Museums have been trying hard to shed their stuffy image.

[shed something (+ adv./prep.)]

[drop]

[formal] to take off a piece of clothing.

  • We shed our jackets.
  • Luke shed his clothes onto the floor.

[shed something]

[drop]

[British English] (of a vehicle) to lose or drop what it is carrying.

  • The traffic jam was caused by a lorry shedding its load.

[shed something]

[skin/leaves]

if an animal sheds its skin, or a plant sheds leaves, it loses them naturally.

  • How often does a snake shed its skin?
  • trees that shed their leaves in autumn.

[shed something (on/over somebody/something)]

[light]

to send light over something; to let light fall somewhere.

  • The candles shed a soft glow on her face.

[shed tears]

[tears]

[formal or literary] to cry.

  • She shed no tears when she heard he was dead.

[shed blood]

[blood]

[formal] to kill or injure people, especially in a war.

  • How much blood will be shed before the fighting ends?

[shed something]

[water]

[formal] to have the quality of causing water or liquid to run off and not sink in

[formal] ter a qualidade de fazer com que a água ou o líquido escorra e não afunde.

  • A duck’s feathers shed water immediately.
  • As penas de um pato repelem água imediatamente.

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