Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun A thin, often tapered piece of material, such as wood, stone, or metal, used to fill gaps, make something level, or adjust something to fit properly.
- transitive verb To fill in, level, or adjust by using shims or a shim.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun A white spot, as a white streak on a horse's face.
- noun An ignis fatuus.
- Same as
shime . - noun Broadly, in machinery, a thin slip (usually of metal, but often of other material) used to fill up space caused by wear, or placed between parts liable to wear, as under the cap of a pillow-block or journal-box.
- noun In stone-working and quarrying, a plate used to fill out the space at the side of a jumper-hole, between it and a wedge used for separating a block of stone, or for contracting the space in fitting a lewis into the hole.
- noun A shim-plow (which see, under
plow ). - To wedge up or fill out to a fair surface by inserting a thin wedge or piece of material.
- noun An imperfect shingle, thicker at one side than the other; also, an imperfect stave for a bucket.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun A kind of shallow plow used in tillage to break the ground, and clear it of weeds.
- noun (Mach.) A thin piece of metal placed between two parts to make a fit.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun informal, often derogatory a person characterised by both male and female traits, or by ambiguous male-female traits, also called a he-she;
transsexual . - noun informal, often derogatory
hermaphrodite . - noun A wedge.
- noun A thin piece of material, sometimes
tapered , used foralignment or support. - noun computing A small
library that transparently intercepts and modifies calls to anAPI , usually forcompatibility purposes. - noun A kind of shallow
plow used intillage to break the ground and clear it of weeds. - noun A small metal device used to
pick open alock . - verb To fit one or more shims to a piece of machinery
- verb To
adjust something by using shims
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun a thin wedge of material (wood or metal or stone) for driving into crevices
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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Marlene was already flipping through the _American Heritage Dictionary_ -- she had brought it in a plastic shopping bag because of my previous day's challenge of "shim" -- and she triumphantly told me, holding the fat volume in my face, that no such word was listed in it.
Beard 2010
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This is being fixed by adding a small piece of metal - called a "shim" - in a procedure that Toyota starts at dealerships in the UK on Wednesday.
BBC - Ouch 2010
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This is being fixed by adding a small piece of metal - called a "shim" - in a procedure that Toyota starts at dealerships in the UK on Wednesday.
BBC - Ouch 2010
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… shim is just a barren, ovaryless freak of nature who maintains a dominatrix-to-trick relationship …
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The code for the shim, which is an HTML Web resource, looks like this:
Site Home Jim Glass MSFT 2011
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Toyota insists, though, that it has found the problem and the shim is the proper fix.
SplicedFeed 2010
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Toyota insists, though, that it has found the problem and the shim is the proper fix.
SplicedFeed 2010
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Toyota insists, though, that it has found the problem and the shim is the proper fix.
SplicedFeed 2010
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Toyota insists, though, that it has found the problem and the shim is the proper fix.
SplicedFeed 2010
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Toyota insists, though, that it has found the problem and the shim is the proper fix.
SplicedFeed 2010
cryptofascistbbq commented on the word shim
Also a low-alcohol-content cocktail.
December 24, 2014
MetaGrrrl commented on the word shim
Term coined to describe low-alcohol cocktails in December 2008
http://www.bibulo.us/2008/12/in-praise-of-the-shim.html
Concept expanded on in 2013 in the book The Art of the Shim: Low-Alcohol Cocktails to Keep You Level, where the term is defined as follows:
“A shim is a cocktail containing no more than half an ounce of strong spirits—those of 40% alcohol by volume (ABV) or above.
That means that a shim contains less alcohol than the average six-ounce glass of wine.”
The term has since begun being adopted in the bar community, appearing in drink names, on menus as a section label, and in the media such as in recent pieces in the U.S. magazine Imbibe and in an article in London Evening Standard.
http://imbibemagazine.com/issue/no-56-julyaugust-2015/
http://www.standard.co.uk/goingout/bars/shim-cocktails-why-lowalcohol-drinks-are-winning-over-london-a3095721.html
November 5, 2015
madmouth commented on the word shim
the hard one we'll call a shiv
November 5, 2015
bilby commented on the word shim
madmouth kills me.
November 6, 2015