| 释义 | 
		shrew I. \ˈshrü, esp South ˈsrü, dial ˈswü\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English shrewe evil person, scolding person, scolding woman, from Old English scrēawa shrew (small mammal) 1.  : any of numerous small mouselike chiefly nocturnal mammals of the family Soricidae which are most closely related to the moles, have a long pointed snout, very small eyes, and velvety fur, feed mainly on worms and insects, and of which most United States forms belong in two genera (Sorex and Blarina) — see elephant shrew, long-tailed shrew, short-tailed shrew, tree shrew, water shrew 2. obsolete  : a wicked or evil person : scoundrel 3.  : a vexatious, scolding, or brawling woman : scold, termagant  < a shrew, a woman with the temper of a fiend — C.S.Forester >  < shrew berating her unemployed husband for not supporting her — John McCarten >  — often opposed to sheep II. transitive verb (-ed/-ing/-s) Etymology: Middle English shrewen, from shrewe, n. 1. obsolete  : curse  < shrew me if I would lose it — Shakespeare > 2.  : to treat with shrewish abuse  < a wicked woman to shrew his splendid features out of shape — Randall Jarrell > |