Shire - Wikipedia "Shire" is the most common word in Australia for rural local government areas (LGAs) New South Wales, the Northern Territory, Queensland, Victoria, and Western Australia, use the term "shire" for this unit; the territories of the Christmas Island and the Cocos (Keeling) Islands are also shires
Shire | County, Rural Districts Boroughs | Britannica Shire, in Great Britain, a county The Anglo-Saxon shire (Old English scir) was an administrative division next above the hundred and seems to have existed in the south in the time of Alfred the Great (871–899) and to have been fully established by the reign of Edgar (959–975)
shire - Wiktionary, the free dictionary shire (third-person singular simple present shires, present participle shiring, simple past and past participle shired) (transitive) To constitute or reconstitute (a country or region) into one or more shires (noun sense 1 1) or counties
Home | American Shire Horse Association This is the place in the United States for all things Shire! Here you can learn more about the breed, search for owners and breeders, register or transfer your new horse and become a member of ASHA
The Real Shire: All English Counties Ending In ‘Shire’ And for any non-British readers, the -shire at the end of counties above tends to be pronounced as -shur, not like ‘The Shire’ from Lord of The Rings Just think of how you would pronounce New Hampshire
The Shire - Tolkien Gateway A "shire" (Old English scír) is an organised region with a county town, which in the case of the Hobbits' Shire was Michel Delving [7] Tolkien notes that the usual Germanic word for "district", represented in Dutch by gouw and in German by Gau, was replaced in English by scír at an early date