potsherd
noun
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L325784 on Wikidata ↗Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈpɒt.ʃɜːd/ / /ˈpɑt.ʃəɹd/
noun
Etymology: From Middle English pot-sherd, pot-schord, pot scherd, pot scarth, from Middle English pot, pote, potte (“a container, pot, vessel; especially an earthenware vessel”) (from late Old English pot, pott (“a pot”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *budn- (“a type of vessel”)) + Middle English sherd (“piece of fired clay or broken earthenware; potsherd”) (from Old English sceard (“a shard, sherd”), from Proto-Germanic *skardą (“a nick, notch”)); equivalent to pot + sherd (“shard”).
- A piece of ceramic from pottery, often found on an archaeological site.
“But this madde Amalecke, / Lyke to a Mamelek, / He regardeth lordes / No more than potshordes; […]”
“[W]ho can deny but that the rod of Gods mouth is indeed Virga virtutis, a rod of strength, an iron rod, able to deale with all humane reaſonings, as a hammer with a potſherd, which though to the hand of a man it may feele as hard as a rocke, yet is too brittle to endure the blow of an iron rod?”