2
general::
shell (sth) out
[ M ] informal
to pay or give money for something, usually unwillingly
• Having shelled out fifty pounds for the tickets, I wasn't going to miss the show.
Cambridge-Phrasal Verbs
4
general::
noun on eggs/nuts/some animals ADJ. broken, empty, hard, outer, protective, thick (figurative) She had built up a protective shell of indifference around herself. | egg (also eggshell) | cockle, conch, cowrie, fossil, mollusc, mussel, oyster, scallop, sea (also seashell), snail The garden was littered with empty snail shells. | coconut, walnut VERB + SHELL have creatures that have shells | come out of, emerge from (often figurative) He's really come out of his shell since he met Marie. | go (back) into, retreat into, withdraw into The snail went back into its shell. | remove sth from Remove the mussels from their shells. explosive weapon ADJ. heavy | unexploded | anti-aircraft, artillery, cannon, howitzer, mortar VERB + SHELL load | fire SHELL + VERB fall, land | blow up, burst, crash, explode | hit sth, strike sth Two shells hit the roof. | blow sth apart/off, blow sb/sth up SHELL + NOUN fire They braved heavy shell fire to rescue the wounded. | case/casing, fragments, splinter | crater, hole outer walls of a building ADJ. concrete | burnt-out, empty, hollow The fire reduced the school to a hollow shell.
Oxford Collocations Dictionary