Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary · 1913

Shore

Shore , imperfect

imperfect of Shear. — Chaucer

Shore , noun

A sewer. [Obsolete or Provincial English]

Shore , noun

[Old English schore; akin to LG. schore, Dutch schoor, OD. schoore, Icelandic skor{not transcribed}a, and perhaps to English shear, as being a piece cut off.]

A prop, as a timber, placed as a brace or support against the side of a building or other structure; a prop placed beneath anything, as a beam, to prevent it from sinking or sagging.

Shore , transitive verb

[Old English schoren. See Shore a prop.]

To support by a shore or shores; to prop; -- usually with up; as, to shore up a building.

Shore , noun

[Old English schore, Anglo-Saxon score, probably from scieran, and so meaning properly, that which is shorn off, edge; akin to OD. schoore, schoor. See Shear, transitive verb]

The coast or land adjacent to a large body of water, as an ocean, lake, or large river.
Michael Cassio, Lieutenant to the warlike Moor Othello, Is come shore. — Shakespeare
The fruitful shore of muddy Nile. — Spenser
Collocations (7)
In shore , near the shore. — Marryat
On shore , See under On.
Shore birds (Zoology) , a collective name for the various limicoline birds found on the seashore.
Shore crab (Zoology) , any crab found on the beaches, or between tides, especially any one of various species of grapsoid crabs, as Heterograpsus nudus of California.
Shore lark (Zoology) , a small American lark (Otocoris alpestris) found in winter, both on the seacoast and on the Western plains. Its upper parts are varied with dark brown and light brown. It has a yellow throat, yellow local streaks, a black crescent on its breast, a black streak below each eye, and two small black erectile ear tufts. Called also horned lark.
Shore plover (Zoology) , a large-billed Australian plover (Esacus magnirostris). It lives on the seashore, and feeds on crustaceans, etc.
Shore teetan (Zoology) , the rock pipit (Anthus obscurus). [Provincial English]

Shore , transitive verb

To set on shore. [Obsolete] — Shakespeare