shild

Noun

 * 1) * 2001, J. Douglas Canfield, Maja-Lisa von Sneidern, The Broadview Anthology of Restoration and Early Eighteenth-Century Drama, Broadview Press (ISBN 9781551112701), page 960, quoting some edition of John Lacy's The Old Troop: Or, Monsieur Raggou (originally from 1672):
 * RAGGOU. For oughta me see, dis shild be your shild.
 * CAPTAIN. How prove you that, sir?
 * RAGGOU. Begar, she say de shild belong to de troop, and you say de troop belong to you; derefore, de shild is your shild, begar.
 * RAGGOU. Madam Dol, before my Capitain, if your shild be born wid never a shart, den it by my shild, for me have had no shart dis forty week.
 * RAGGOU. Begar, she say de shild belong to de troop, and you say de troop belong to you; derefore, de shild is your shild, begar.
 * RAGGOU. Madam Dol, before my Capitain, if your shild be born wid never a shart, den it by my shild, for me have had no shart dis forty week.

Etymology 1
From.

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Noun

 * 1) Debt; fault; guilt.