It is hard to pin down an exact invention date, but the word and the idea were being used as far back as the 1440s, according to Wikipedia.
Answer
In harder times, people built one small building, separated by a short wall, where both people and their animals lived. This enabled them both to keep warm in the hard winters. Root cellars were used to keep fruit, vegetables and seeds until the winter or the next planing season. Sheds probably appeared as people became more prosperous and all of their tools or other needs would not fit into the primary space.
Answer
On the lighter side....
The shed was invented in March 1983 by Prof J. Boyle of Whitburn Technological Institute. He was researching into the metaphysical properties of shovels when he stumbled across this quite amazing discovery. In the 22 years since, the shed has become one of the most valuable discoveries in recent history.
(source - The Shed Age by Patrick Francis :the jocular press, 2000:) Answer The above answers have got the question entirely wrong. The shed was invented one minute after the invention of the comb.The first time a man drew a comb through his hair and formed a parting he invented the shed,
Shedding is the present participle of the verb shed.
The phrase 'in the shed' has the preposition 'in' and the noun 'shed'
The expense to paint the shed is a function of the shed's surface area.
To identify the adjective that modifies "shed," you need to look for a descriptive word that provides more information about it. For example, in the phrase "the large shed," the adjective "large" modifies "shed" by describing its size. If you have a specific sentence in mind, please provide it for a more precise answer.
no
In my shed with a hammer and some plastic stuff
She did her inventions in her "laboratory" which was an old rundown garden shed.
Thomas Franze of FrankFurt Germany invented the frankfurter in 1835 originally made from a wild boar he had discovered in his wood shed.
Yes Morki's shed but are not known to shed much.
Koalas do not shed. They undergo a seasonal moult, but they do not 'shed'.
A loafing shed or lean-to.
No, the word 'shed' is both a noun (shed, sheds) and a verb (shed, sheds, shedding, shed). Examples:The house includes a shed to store your lawnmower. (noun)Lisa was delighted to find that she had shed twelve pounds. (verb)A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'shed' is it. Example:The house includes a shed. You can store your lawnmower in it.
The past participle and simple past tense is also shed.
The past tense of "shed" is "shed." It remains the same in both present and past forms.
shed can be for the workshop or a dog can shed fur
No, i have a cute peekapoo who is 14 and he doesnt shed.
yes they shed