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Bible Encyclopedias
Shingle
1911 Encyclopedia Britannica
(i) A Middle English corruption of schindle, from Lat. scindula or scandula, a wooden tile, from scandere, to cut - a kind of wooden tile, generally of oak, used in places where timber is plentiful, for covering roofs, spires, &c. In England they are generally plain, but on the continent of Europe the ends are sometimes rounded, pointed or cut into ornamental form. (2) Water-worn detritus, of larger and coarser form than gravel, chiefly used of the pebbly detritus of a sea-beach. This word is of Norwegian origin, from singl or singling, coarse gravel. It is apparently derived from singla, to make a ringing sound, a form of "to sing," with allusion to the peculiar noise made when walking over shingle. (3) The word "shingles," the common name of herpes zoster, a particular form of the inflammatory eruption of the skin known as herpes (q.v.), is the plural of an obsolete word for a girdle, sengle, taken through O. Fr. cengle from Lat. cingulum, cingere, to gird.
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Chisholm, Hugh, General Editor. Entry for 'Shingle'. 1911 Encyclopedia Britanica. https://www.studylight.org/​encyclopedias/​eng/​bri/​s/shingle.html. 1910.