‹ The Lexicon

shid

verb
\ shid \ /ʃɪd/
✓ Sendy original
verb informal

Inflections used chiefly in the past tense; present shid, past shid

1

to have done at last a thing one ought to have done long before; to discharge a long-deferred obligation, especially with a note of relief or belated triumph.

a

in the second person, used to congratulate another on completing such an overdue task; often laudatory.

2026

“You're the man, because you shid it all over the brarpet.”

— Professor Sendy

b

of an action: to have been both warranted and carried out at once, collapsing the gap between what was owed and what was done.

2026

“He didn't just mean to fix it; he shid it.”

— Professor Sendy

2026

“Did I do it? I finally shid.”

— Professor Sendy

2026

“Can you believe I actually shid it?”

— Professor Sendy

Synonyms

finally got around to itdid the overdue thing

Word History

The Combo

should did shid

wombo (word + combo), blending "should" and "did," with the modal "shoul-" collapsed into the past-tense "did" so that obligation and accomplishment occupy a single syllable. Coined by Professor Sendy in 2026. The contraction parallels the colloquial spelling "shid" already in circulation as a euphemistic respelling of an unrelated vulgarity; Sendy's coinage is independent of that sense and denotes only the should-plus-did meaning.

First Known Use 2026

Coinage credited to Professor Sendy.

Attested in the source utterance, @ProfessorSendy ↗

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