shack[S]1[S] vI was shacking in Gander (had a room, living self-sufficient)DNE-cit WK May 1965Used I and SupUsed INot usedlumber woods, Shacking, shacking and hatching,LOCKER, ~ oneself/locker.The source is not listed in DNE but the card is stamped
shack[S]1[S] vOn the Grand Banks, the forecastle locker in which left-over food is left for futur...
shack nWe're going in to the shack for the holiday. Explanation:- any cottage, no matter how be...
shack nNewfoundlanders have a great fondness for shacks. A great profusion of them is maintained in...
shack[S]1[S] vWe had to shack ourselves now. Find ourselves a little ol' shack. We got to get up an...
shack[S]1[S] v...the "shack locker" is a cupboard in the schooner's forecastle in which is to be fo...
shack[S]1[S] vExam answer, paraphrasing D Pitt's intro to Pratt: "By "shacking" himself and worki...
shack[S]1[S] va fisherman is always hungry, and in addition to three square meals per diem, he ind...
shack[S]2[S] vTo mend trawls.DNE-cit JAN 1972Used IUsed I1Used IShacking gear, shack in, ~ down.A p...
shack[S]1[S] vHe was in what he calls the 'mug-up locker' (often called the 'shack locker') and wa...
shack[S]1[S] vNot all lumbermen eat in the skipper's cook house. Some have their own little camps ...
shack[S]1[S] v'But now there was me and another fella, we were shackin' ourselves, cooking for ours...
shack[S]1[S] vLiving in a small and usually very rough private camp. Shacks are used by commuting l...
shack[S]2[S] vcleaning the trawl or gear, putting on new hooks, suds, or gingins, and checking all ...
shack[S]2[S] vIn the fall when the fishing season was over the fishermen would repair their fishing...
shack na temporary shelter in the woods'DNE-cit WK 61Used IUsed INot usedThere is no source listed...
shack[S]1[S] vOn the Grand Banks, the forecastle locker in which left-over food is left for futur...
shack nWe're going in to the shack for the holiday. Explanation:- any cottage, no matter how be...
shack nNewfoundlanders have a great fondness for shacks. A great profusion of them is maintained in...
shack[S]1[S] vWe had to shack ourselves now. Find ourselves a little ol' shack. We got to get up an...
shack[S]1[S] v...the "shack locker" is a cupboard in the schooner's forecastle in which is to be fo...
shack[S]1[S] vExam answer, paraphrasing D Pitt's intro to Pratt: "By "shacking" himself and worki...
shack[S]1[S] va fisherman is always hungry, and in addition to three square meals per diem, he ind...
shack[S]2[S] vTo mend trawls.DNE-cit JAN 1972Used IUsed I1Used IShacking gear, shack in, ~ down.A p...
shack[S]1[S] vHe was in what he calls the 'mug-up locker' (often called the 'shack locker') and wa...
shack[S]1[S] vNot all lumbermen eat in the skipper's cook house. Some have their own little camps ...
shack[S]1[S] v'But now there was me and another fella, we were shackin' ourselves, cooking for ours...
shack[S]1[S] vLiving in a small and usually very rough private camp. Shacks are used by commuting l...
shack[S]2[S] vcleaning the trawl or gear, putting on new hooks, suds, or gingins, and checking all ...
shack[S]2[S] vIn the fall when the fishing season was over the fishermen would repair their fishing...
shack na temporary shelter in the woods'DNE-cit WK 61Used IUsed INot usedThere is no source listed...
shack[S]1[S] vOn the Grand Banks, the forecastle locker in which left-over food is left for futur...
shack nWe're going in to the shack for the holiday. Explanation:- any cottage, no matter how be...
shack nNewfoundlanders have a great fondness for shacks. A great profusion of them is maintained in...