Advertisement

Advertisement

shredder

[ shred-er ]

noun

  1. a person or thing that shreds.
  2. a machine for destroying secret or private documents by shredding shredding them.
  3. any of various devices used to shred crops, vegetables, wood, metal, etc.


Discover More

Word History and Origins

Origin of shredder1

First recorded in 1565–75; shred + -er 1
Discover More

Example Sentences

Seven weeks in, he suggested, 2025 is on track to be one of them: “a time when the basic assumptions about the way our world works are fed into the shredder.”

From Salon

“Once the trees go through the shredders, they vanish,” he said, showing a reporter an image of a small pile of brown dust left by the crews.

What a professional does: Pros dispose of sensitive documents and data using top shredders and secure erasure methods.

From Salon

Wilders, who ardently denies climate science, called in his election platform for putting all climate policies and agreements “through the shredder,” but he conceded in Parliament that won’t happen.

“Labour MPs are happy. We’re not. That tells a story,” one minister fumed in my general direction as he reeled off a list of legislation he had been involved in, now headed for the shredder.

From BBC

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement


shredded wheatshredding