shack[S]1[S] vWe had to shack ourselves now. Find ourselves a little ol' shack. We got to get up an' boil our kettle in the morning an' have our breakfast.... (find accommodation in a shack etc)YesDNE-cit J.D.A.WIDDOWSON JUL 1973Used I and SupUsed I and SupUsed Ilumber woods, Shacking, shacking and hatching,LOCKER, ~ oneself/locker.There source is listed as T 172/4-65 in DNE and only part of the cited quotation on the card is in DNE
sheeter nAn' now this was the sheeters (?) on th' ice in spring o' the year, see. ...
shack nThe bough house out back of the hill is replaced by the "shack" in the country with an asph...
shim nA shim - the only name I have for a shim is if you build a... a log...a log house, you know, ...
shack[S]1[S] vI was shacking in Gander (had a room, living self-sufficient)DNE-cit WK May 1965...
shack[S]1[S] vExam answer, paraphrasing D Pitt's intro to Pratt: "By "shacking" himself and worki...
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] 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 nWe're going in to the shack for the holiday. Explanation:- any cottage, no matter how be...
shack[S]2[S] vIn the fall when the fishing season was over the fishermen would repair their fishing...
shack[S]1[S] vNot all lumbermen eat in the skipper's cook house. Some have their own little camps ...
shack[S]2[S] vcleaning the trawl or gear, putting on new hooks, suds, or gingins, and checking all ...
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] v'But now there was me and another fella, we were shackin' ourselves, cooking for ours...
shack nNewfoundlanders have a great fondness for shacks. A great profusion of them is maintained in...
sheeter nAn' now this was the sheeters (?) on th' ice in spring o' the year, see. ...
shack nThe bough house out back of the hill is replaced by the "shack" in the country with an asph...
shim nA shim - the only name I have for a shim is if you build a... a log...a log house, you know, ...
shack[S]1[S] vI was shacking in Gander (had a room, living self-sufficient)DNE-cit WK May 1965...
shack[S]1[S] vExam answer, paraphrasing D Pitt's intro to Pratt: "By "shacking" himself and worki...
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] 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 nWe're going in to the shack for the holiday. Explanation:- any cottage, no matter how be...
shack[S]2[S] vIn the fall when the fishing season was over the fishermen would repair their fishing...
shack[S]1[S] vNot all lumbermen eat in the skipper's cook house. Some have their own little camps ...
shack[S]2[S] vcleaning the trawl or gear, putting on new hooks, suds, or gingins, and checking all ...
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] v'But now there was me and another fella, we were shackin' ourselves, cooking for ours...
shack nNewfoundlanders have a great fondness for shacks. A great profusion of them is maintained in...
sheeter nAn' now this was the sheeters (?) on th' ice in spring o' the year, see. ...
shack nThe bough house out back of the hill is replaced by the "shack" in the country with an asph...
shim nA shim - the only name I have for a shim is if you build a... a log...a log house, you know, ...