Usage Notes
What Is Shifting
Do you give someone short shrift or short shift? Is there a difference? Whichever is correct, is it a medieval version of short-sheeting a person, but with monk’s robes, instead of sheets? What on earth is shrift, and can it be long as well as short? It’s fascinating how many questions one can have about an increasingly archaic term.
But you should be able to make quick work of it.
We provide strategic and organisational design services to 'changemakers for good'. Our world is in flux. Placing us at the cusp of profound paradigm shifts. Going to another Parallel reality. The act of violently thrusting one's pelvic area forward, usually in the direction of another person. Often used my Minecrafters as a form of 'virtual humping'.
Clone shifts are now available in the Schedule page to allow you to create a number of duplicate empty and open shifts to save you time when scheduling a large number of employees in an area.
You give short shrift to a person or situation (or can make short shrift of something), not short shift. While the words short and shift may be found used together, it generally is without the fixed set of meanings that short shrift has, and is not something we would define. And no, there is no real connection between giving someone short shrift and short-sheeting their bed.
Short shrift has a small handful of possible meanings. The earliest one is “barely adequate time for confession before execution”; more recent senses are “little or no attention or consideration” (as in ‘I gave him short shrift’) or “quick work,” which is usually found in the phrase make short shrift of.
The use of the confessional sense of short shrift goes back to the 16th century.
….he tooke a preeste at auenture & made a shorte shrift, for a longer would not bee suffred, the protectoure made so muche haste to his dyner, whiche might not goo to it till this murther were dooen for sauing of his vngracious othe.
— John Harding, The Chronicle of Ihon Hardyng in Metre, 1543
— John Harding, The Chronicle of Ihon Hardyng in Metre, 1543
If villain, feedest thou me with Ifs & ands, go fetch me a Priest, make a short shrift, and dispatch him quickly For by the blessed Saint Paule I sweare, I will not dine till I see the traitors head.
— Anon. The True Tragedie of Richard the Third, 1594
— Anon. The True Tragedie of Richard the Third, 1594
The extended uses of short shrift 32 minutes. , those which do not explicitly refer to a brief confession before dying, are now somewhat more common than the original one.
'If I judged them, I'd give them short shrift!' cried Moore; 'but I mean to let them quite alone this bout, to give them rope enough, certain that in the end they will hang themselves.”
— Charlotte Brontë, Shirley 1849
— Charlotte Brontë, Shirley 1849
'Here is a spy of the enemy, General,' said the Sergeant.
'Make short shrift of him! We have no time for courtmartials now.”
— J. B. Jones, Border War, 1859
'Make short shrift of him! We have no time for courtmartials now.”
— J. B. Jones, Border War, 1859
Now turning to the most important questions, let’s look a what shrift is and whether or not it can be long. A shrift is “a remission of sins pronounced by a priest in the sacrament of reconciliation,” or, more generally, a confession, which explains the earliest sense of short shrift. Etymologically, shrift comes from the Old English word scrīfan, meaning “to shrive.” Shrive means “to free from guilt,” or “to administer the sacrament of reconciliation to,” and comes from the Latin scribere (“to write”). Scribere is the source of both scribble and short shrift.
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But can a shrift be long? Well, sure, at least in the sense that anything that may be described as short may be lengthened and made long.
Shifren Skier
But now thou art in great peril of death and must confess; yet do not overlook any of thy lesser sins through overmuch haste, for we have time for a long shrift ere our riders can be here.
— Frederick Scarlett, Melcombe Manor, 1875
— Frederick Scarlett, Melcombe Manor, 1875
Shifren Williams
Kill or be killed was the rule of law, and the killer had no long shrift from the law.
— Ernest Bowen-Rowlands, Judgment of Death, 1924
— Ernest Bowen-Rowlands, Judgment of Death, 1924
The use of long shrift is very uncommon, and, when found, often seems to be an attempt at punning on short shrift. It’s not wrong to put these words together, but neither is it a fixed phrase. Which means you can give it whatever kind of shrift you want.
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Merriam-Webster unabridged