Dictionary Definition
shinny v : climb awkwardly, as if by scrambling
[syn: clamber, scramble, shin, skin, struggle, sputter]
User Contributed Dictionary
Verb
- To climb in an awkward manner.
Etymology 2
Variation of shinty.Noun
or shinny hockey- An informal game of pickup hockey played with minimal equipment: skates, sticks and a puck or ball.
- Street hockey.
- Hockey.
Etymology 3
Noun
- Moonshine (illegal
alcohol)
- 1960, Harper Lee,
To
Kill a Mockingbird, chapter 13,
- Miss Maudie Atkinson baked a Lane cake so loaded with shinny it made me tight;....
- Ibid.,
- He sent them packing next day armed with their charts and five quarts of shinny in their saddlebags—two apiece and one for the Governor.
- 1960, Harper Lee,
To
Kill a Mockingbird, chapter 13,
References
Extensive Definition
Shinny (or shinney) is an informal type of
hockey
played on ice or the street. There are no formal rules or specific
positions, and generally, there are no goaltenders. The goal areas
at each end may be marked simply by objects, such as blocks of
snow, stones, etc. Bodychecking and lifting or
"roofing/reefing/raising the puck" (shooting the puck or ball so it
rises above the ice) are often forbidden because the players are
not wearing protective equipment. It may also be called pick-up
hockey or pond hockey. Shinny is a game that all levels of hockey
enthusiasts can play because it requires no rink, requires no
skills except ability to hold a stick and at the very least to try
to touch the puck or ball when it goes by. Shinny may be completely
non-competitive and recreational - scoring irrelevant - or
competitive and scores kept.
Team formation
In some places, there is ritual for choosing
teams. Each player deposits his stick in the middle of the ice in a
pile. One player bends down, closes his/her eyes (or places their
toque over their eyes) and
splits the pile into two equal sections. When numbers permit, three
piles may be created, with one team waiting off to play the winner.
Players then pick up their own sticks. The two groups of sticks
form the two teams.
Very often teams are formed with intent to divide
the group into approximately equal levels of skills among the
players. Players joining after play has started are usually told
"which way they are going" (which net they should shoot towards)
based upon the score of the game and their skill level. Some games
continue for many hours with some players leaving and others
joining.
History and name origin
Shinny, generally believed to be a pre-cursor to
ice
hockey, was informal enough in its formative years that the
pucks and sticks were often makeshift. During the Great Depression,
for example, northern boys used tree branches or broomhandles as
sticks, a tin can, a piece of wood, and even a frozen road apple
(farm animal dropping) as a puck. Any object about the right size
might serve as a puck.
The name is derived from the Scottish game shinty and indeed shinny was a
common name for one of shinty's many regional variations in
Scotland.
Shinny, a primarily Canadian
term, is usually called scrimmage, pick-up
hockey or RAT Hockey in the United
States.
Former Canadian Prime
Minister Jean
Chrétien famously played a (naturally) impromptu game of shinny
on the Rideau Canal
with school children during his time in office.
Other games called "shinny"
"Shinny" can also refer to a game played on one's
knees with sticks about a foot and a half in length. The goals are
also a foot and a half in height, and about 2 feet in width. This
game is usually played between around six players where there is
one goalie, and two shooters. The game is usually played by
children, indoors and in small rooms or areas. It is sometimes
referred to as "Knee Hockey" or "Mini-Sticks." (In reference to the
size of the sticks used to play.)