| a stew of meat, vegetables, potatoes, etc. |
| a calculus or concretion found in the stomach or intestines of certain animals, esp. ruminants, formerly reputed to be an effective remedy for poison. |
shall (ʃæl, (unstressed) ʃəl) ![]() | |
| —vb (takes an infinitive without to | |
| 1. | Compare will used as an auxiliary to make the future tense: we shall see you tomorrow |
| 2. | a. used as an auxiliary to indicate determination on the part of the speaker, as in issuing a threat: you shall pay for this! |
| b. used as an auxiliary to indicate compulsion, now esp in official documents: the Tenant shall return the keys to the Landlord | |
| c. used as an auxiliary to indicate certainty or inevitability: our day shall come | |
| 3. | (with any noun or pronoun as subject, esp in conditional clauses or clauses expressing doubt) used as an auxiliary to indicate nonspecific futurity: I don't think I shall ever see her again; he doubts whether he shall be in tomorrow |
| usage The usual rule given for the use of shall and will is that where the meaning is one of simple futurity, shall is used for the first person of the verb and will for the second and third: I shall go tomorrow; they will be there now. Where the meaning involves command, obligation, or determination, the positions are reversed: it shall be done; I will definitely go. However, shall has come to be largely neglected in favour of will, which has become the commonest form of the future in all three persons | |
shouldst or shouldest (ʃʊdst, ˈʃʊdɪst) ![]() | |
| —vb (used with the pronoun thou | |
| archaic, dialect or a form of the past tense of shall | |
| shouldest or shouldest | |
| —vb | |