Shard

Shard
This interesting and unusual name, with variant spellings Shird and Shard, is either of Northern English locational origin from Sherd, a place in the parish of Stockport, Cheshire, or of Saithern English topographical origin from residence by a detached piece of land. The derivation in the first instance is from the Northern Medieval English "Shard" from the Old Norse "Skarth", a gap or mountain pass, and in the second instance from the Old English pre 7th Century "scyrte", "a piece cut off". One John atte Shurte, noted in the 1296, "Subsidy Rolls of Sussex", is among the earliest recorded namebearers from the latter source. The Cheshire Wills Records note several from the former source including William del Sherd, an archer of the Crown, East Cheshire, (1398); William Sherd, of Sherd, (1473); Jeffrey Shirt, of Stanley, (1593), and Thomas Shirt, a preacher from Chester, (1618). The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of Godwin de la Sirte, which was dated 1179, in the Pipe Rolls of Surrey, during the reign of King Henry 11, known as "The Builder of Churches", 1154 - 1189. Surnames became necessary when governments introduced personal taxation. In England this was known as Poll Tax. Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have continued to "develop" often leading to astonishing variants of the original spelling.

Surnames reference. 2013.

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  • Shard — may refer to:* Sherd, a fragment of pottery, glass or stone * Elytron, a forewing found on some insect species * Shard London Bridge, a planned skyscraper * Meth, another word for the drug meth, reffering to the shard like crystals Popular… …   Wikipedia

  • shard — [ʃa:d US ʃa:rd] n also sherd [: Old English; Origin: sceard] a sharp piece of broken glass, metal etc shard of ▪ a shard of pottery …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • Shard — (sh[aum]rd), n. A plant; chard. [Obs.] Dryden. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Shard — (sh[aum]rd), n. [AS. sceard, properly a p. p. from the root of scearn to shear, to cut; akin to D. schaard a fragment, G. scharte a notch, Icel. skar[eth]. See {Shear}, and cf. {Sherd}.] [Written also {sheard}, and {sherd}.] 1. A piece or… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • shard — [shärd] n. [ME < OE sceard, akin to scieran, to SHEAR] 1. a fragment or broken piece, esp. of pottery; potsherd 2. Zool. a hard covering, as a shell, plate, scale, or elytron …   English World dictionary

  • shard — [ ʃard ] noun count a sharp piece of broken glass, metal, or other hard substance …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • shard — (n.) O.E. sceard fragment, gap, from P.Gmc. *skardas, a pp. from the root of O.E. sceran to cut (see SHEAR (Cf. shear)). Cf. Du. schaard a flaw, a fragment, Ger. Scharte a notch, Dan. skaar chink, potsherd. Meaning fragment of …   Etymology dictionary

  • shard — ► NOUN ▪ a sharp piece of broken ceramic, metal, glass, etc. ORIGIN Old English, «gap, notch, potsherd»; related to SHEAR(Cf. ↑shearer) …   English terms dictionary

  • shard|ed — «SHAHR dihd», adjective. having shards or elytra, as a beetle; coleopterous: »Sharded insects…vastly outnumber all the other forms of active life we see (New York Times) …   Useful english dictionary

  • Shard — Als Freeshards werden Server für Online Spiele (zumeist MMORPGs) bezeichnet, die nicht vom ursprünglichen, kommerziellen Hersteller des Spieles unterhalten werden. Das Wort Freeshard hat sich in der Ultima Online Szene entwickelt, in der auch die …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • shard — cow·shard; land·shard; shard; …   English syllables

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