unshoe
English
Etymology
From Middle English unshon, from Old English onscōgan (“to unshoe”), equivalent to un- + shoe.
Verb
unshoe (third-person singular simple present unshoes, present participle unshoeing, simple past and past participle unshoed or unshod)
- (transitive) to remove a shoe (especially a horseshoe) from.
- 1889, T. F. Thiselton-Dyer, The Folk-lore of Plants:
- With plants of the kind we may compare the wonder-working moonwort (Botrychium lunaria), which was said to open locks and to unshoe horses that trod on it, a notion which Du Bartas thus mentions in his "Divine Weekes" – "Horses that, feeding on the grassy hills, Tread upon moonwort with their hollow heels, Though lately shod, at night go barefoot home, Their maister musing where their shoes become.
Anagrams
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