The Collaborative International Dictionary
Shadd \Shadd\ (sh[a^]d), n. (Mining.)
Rounded stones containing tin ore, lying at the surface of
the ground, and indicating a vein.
--Raymond.
Usage examples of "shadd".
Frieda, go find Lucy Shadd and tell her to call an ambulance immediately.
Lady Rhys was out in the aisle now, helping Lucy Shadd carry around the drinks.
Then, still carrying the other lamp, he followed the gleam of the battery lantern Lucy Shadd had commandeered to a linen closet where she was snatching blankets and pillows off the shelves with the concentrated zeal of a deacon counting the Sunday morning collection.
Lucy Shadd turned out to be the only one of the ten staff members traveling with them.
The self-sacrificing Lucy Shadd was apparently going to take on Frieda Loye and her nightmares as part of the job.
My duty at the moment is to investigate a murderous assault which was made a short time ago upon Lucy Shadd, who is occupying the room two doors away from yours.
Did you also think it would be a jolly jape to scare Lucy Shadd within an inch of her life?
Lucy Shadd and Frieda Loye were both on the thin side, neither of them young.
He got a full-dress reception from the entire company, including Lucy Shadd in a Black Watch tartan bathrobe, with a dark blue scarf wound twice around her neck.
Most of the group were concerned as to whether their families had been notified, but Lucy Shadd wanted more.
Madame Loye is indeed a maniac as Madame Shadd alleges, how had she not the ability to complete the strangling?
The manacled Lucy Shadd sat between Madoc and Carlos Pitney in the middle seat, none of them saying a word.
He said you would swear that Shadd and his mob had beaten you up, taken the key and gone back to the house to look for certain important papers.
He struck up an acquaintanceship with Shadd in the Lido, a gambling house in the country, and got Shadd to throw in with him.
She heard the whicker of horses, Shadd complaining of stiffness in his back, Ser Wendel calling for his bow.