shred

/ʃred/ (bre, ipa) · /ʃred/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈshred especially Southern ˈsred/ (ame, mw)

shred — noun

  • shredsingular
  • shredsplural

1. An extremely small quantity of something, used mainly in negative statements or

1.名詞B2
釋義

An extremely small quantity of something, used mainly in negative statements or questions to say that there is none at all.

例句

The detective found not a shred of evidence linking the suspect to the crime.

not a shred of + [noun] — idiom for zero amount

There is not a shred of truth in the rumours that the bakery is closing.

同義詞
  • bit

    less forceful; can be used in affirmative sentences ('a bit of evidence')

  • scrap

    similar negative-restricted pattern ('not a scrap of proof')

  • trace

    emphasises a tiny, barely detectable presence

反義詞
  • lot

    no restriction to negative contexts

  • abundance

    formal, implies a large quantity

文法句型

not a shred of + [uncountable noun]

用法筆記

This sense is almost always used in negative constructions — the noun shred is rarely found in affirmative statements outside fixed expressions.

常見錯誤

There was a shred of evidence.
There was not a shred of evidence.
💡In affirmative sentences, 'a shred of' sounds unnatural; use 'not a shred of' or 'no shred of'.

2. A narrow strip of material, such as paper or fabric, which has been torn or cut

2.名詞B1
釋義

A narrow strip of material, such as paper or fabric, which has been torn or cut off of a larger object.

例句

Jin picked up the shreds of the envelope that his dog had chewed apart.

shreds of + [noun] — physical fragments

The old letters had crumbled into tiny shreds after decades in the attic.

同義詞
  • strip

    more neutral; does not imply forcible tearing

  • ribbon

    implies a neat, narrow piece, not a torn one

  • fragment

    broader — can be any small broken piece, not necessarily long and narrow

文法句型

shreds of + [noun]

3. A condition in which cloth, paper, or similar material has been ripped into many

3.名詞B2
釋義

A condition in which cloth, paper, or similar material has been ripped into many small, hanging pieces, leaving it badly damaged.

例句

After the cat clawed the curtains, they were in shreds and had to be replaced.

‘be in shreds’ — describing a ruined physical state

The old flag was in shreds after winter winds at the town hall.

同義詞
  • tatters

    very similar; slightly more formal ('the clothes were in tatters')

  • ribbons

    informal, strong image ('the flag was torn to ribbons')

文法句型

in shreds

torn to shreds

用法筆記

Distinguish from sense 4: sense 3 describes literal tearing of material, while sense 4 describes figurative or abstract damage to plans, reputations, or intangible things.

4. A ruined or spoiled state, used figuratively for things such as plans, reputatio

4.名詞B2
釋義

A ruined or spoiled state, used figuratively for things such as plans, reputations, relationships, or careers.

例句

After the scandal, the senator's reputation was in shreds and she decided to retire.

‘in shreds’ — figurative ruin of an abstract thing

Their relationship was in shreds after years of arguments about money.

同義詞
  • in ruins

    can apply to both physical structures and abstract things; more final

  • shattered

    stronger emotional impact, frequently used with hopes or confidence

反義詞
  • intact

    implies nothing has been damaged or lost

  • sound

    emphasises good condition and stability

文法句型

in shreds

用法筆記

The collocation 'in shreds' in this sense is always figurative — the subject is not a physical object but an abstract noun such as reputation, career, or plan.

shred — verb