Shut
Bible Usage:
- First Reference: Genesis 7:16
- Last Reference: Revelation 21:25
Dictionaries:
- Included in Eastons: No
- Included in Hitchcocks: No
- Included in Naves: No
- Included in Smiths: No
- Included in Websters: Yes
- Included in Strongs: Yes
- Included in Thayers: Yes
- Included in BDB: Yes
Strongs Concordance:
- H1479 Used 1 time
- H2902 Used 1 time
- H332 Used 1 time
- H5462 Used 24 times
- H5463 Used 1 time
- H6113 Used 1 time
- H7092 Used 2 times
- H8173 Used 1 time
- G2808 Used 9 times
SHUT, verb transitive pretand participle passive shut.
1. To close so as to hinder ingress or egress; as, to shut a door or gate; to shut the eyes or the mouth.
2. To prohibit; to bar; to forbid entrance into; as, to shut the ports of the kingdom by a blockade.
Shall that be shut to man, which to the beast
Is open? Milton.
3. To preclude; to exclude.
But shut from every shore. Dryden.
4. To close, as the fingers; to contract; as, to shut the hand.
To shut in, to inclose; to confine.
2. Spoken of points of land, when by the progress of a ship, one point is brought to cover or intercept the view of another. It is then said, we shut in such a point, we shut in the land; or one point shuts in another.
To shut out, to preclude from entering; to deny admission to; to exclude; as, to shut out rain by a tight roof. An interesting subject occupying the mind, shuts out all other thoughts.
To shut up, to close; to make fast the entrances into; as, to shut up a house.
2. To obstruct.
Dangerous rocks shut up the passage. Raleigh.
3. To confine; to imprison; to lock or fasten in; as, to shut up a prisoner.
4. To confine by legal or moral restraint.
Before faith came, we were kept under the law, shut up to the faith, which should afterwards be revealed. Galatians 3:23.
5. To end; to terminate; to conclude.
When the scene of life is shut up, the slave will be above his master, if he has acted better. Collier.
SHUT, verb intransitive To close itself; to be closed. The door shuts of itself; it shuts hard. Certain flowers shut at night and open in the day.
SHUT, participle passive
1. Closed; having the entrance barred.
2. adjective Rid; clear; free.
SHUT, noun
1. Close; the act of closing; as the shut of a door; the shut of evening. [Little used.]
2. A small door or cover; But shutter is more generally used.
plant; verdure; moist; pot
1. Son of Ephraim
Numbers 26:35-36; 1 Chronicles 7:20
2. Son of Zabad
1 Chronicles 7:21
(noise of breaking), head of an Ephraimite family, called after him Shuthalhites, (Numbers 26:35) and lineal ancestor of Joshua the son of Numb (1 Chronicles 7:20-27)
SHUT'TER, noun
1. A person that shuts or closes.
2. A door; a cover; something that closes a passage; as the shutters of a window.
SHUT'TING, participle present tense Closing; prohibiting entrance; confining.
SHUT'TLE, noun [from the root of shoot; Ice. skutul.] An instrument used by weavers for shooting the thread of the woof in weaving from one side of the cloth to the other, between the threads of the warp.
SHUT'TLE-COCK, noun [shuttle and cock or cork.] A cork stuck with fethers, used to be struck by a battledore in play; also, the play.
Bible Usage:
- First Reference: Genesis 7:16
- Last Reference: Revelation 21:25
Dictionaries:
- Included in Eastons: No
- Included in Hitchcocks: No
- Included in Naves: No
- Included in Smiths: No
- Included in Websters: Yes
- Included in Strongs: Yes
- Included in Thayers: Yes
- Included in BDB: Yes
Strongs Concordance:
- H1479 Used 1 time
- H2902 Used 1 time
- H332 Used 1 time
- H5462 Used 24 times
- H5463 Used 1 time
- H6113 Used 1 time
- H7092 Used 2 times
- H8173 Used 1 time
- G2808 Used 9 times