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Shutter   /ʃˈətər/   Listen
Shutter

noun
1.
A mechanical device on a camera that opens and closes to control the time of a photographic exposure.
2.
A hinged blind for a window.
verb
1.
Close with shutters.



Shut

adjective
1.
Not open.  Synonyms: closed, unopen.
2.
Used especially of mouth or eyes.  Synonym: closed.  "His eyes were shut against the sunlight"



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"Shutter" Quotes from Famous Books



... plenty. Now, having made a list of their wants, they folded the money in the paper, put it into a bag, which Archer tied to a long string, and, having broken the pane of glass behind the round hole in the window-shutter, he let down the bag to the gipsy. She promised to be punctual, and having filled the bag with Fisher's twelve buns, they were drawn up in triumph, and everybody anticipated the pleasure with which they should see the same bag drawn up at dinner-time. The buns were a little squeezed in ...
— The Parent's Assistant • Maria Edgeworth

... all by story, seemed to swim in a benign air, and the outer world drew the souls of these men in a tavern into a brief acquaintanceship. The window of the large room they sat in looked out upon this world new lit by the tender moon that hung on Strome. A magistrate made to shutter it and bring the hour ...
— Doom Castle • Neil Munro

... the door violently, and the man heard him shoot two large bolts. A moment later, the window-shutter was closed, and the sound of a bar of iron which was placed against ...
— Les Miserables - Complete in Five Volumes • Victor Hugo

... window, throw open the closed shutter, let the fresh air in, and let the housed captive breathe the invigorating elixir of life; better by far than all your pills and cordials, and more strengthening than all the poor-man's plasters that have been or ...
— Town and Country, or, Life at Home and Abroad • John S. Adams

... he stole cat-soft from trunk to trunk, studying it. There were no lights, no smoke from the chimneys, no sign of habitation. A loosened shutter on the ground floor banged furiously, calling out echoes from the solitude. He circled the back of it, round by the outbuildings, a lot of them, one like a stable—all silent. Then made his way to the ...
— Treasure and Trouble Therewith - A Tale of California • Geraldine Bonner


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