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Hell is moved for thee, to meet thee at thy name of Christ was at all brought into those. coming; it stirreth up the dead for thee. Isaiah.

parts.

Abbot. Such mirth the jocund flute or gamesome pipe Being advertised of some stirs raised by his Stirs up among the loose unletter'd hinds. Milt. unnatural sons in England, he departed out of To stir up vigour in him, employ him in some Ireland without a blow.

Dooies. constant bodily labour.

Locke.

Raphael, thou hear'st what stir on earth The use of the passions is to stir up the mind Satan, from hell 'scap'd through the darksome and put it upon action, to awake the under

gulf, standing, and to entorce the will. Addison. Hath rais'd in Paradise, and how disturb'd To $TIR. v.n.

This night the huntan pair.

Miltor. 3. To move one's self; to go out of the 3. Agitation of thoughts ; conflicting place; to change place.

passion. No power he had to stir, nor will to rise.

He did keep

Spenser. The deck, with glove, or hat, or handkerchief, They had the semblance of grcat bodies be- Suill waving, as the stirs and fits of 's mind hind, on the cher side of the hill; the false- Couki best express how slow his soul saii'd on, hood of which would have been manifest as soon

How swilt his ship.

Sbakspearer as they should move from the place where they Sri’rious. adj. [from stiria, Lat.] Rewere, and from whence they were not to stir.

sembling icicles.

Clarendor. Chrystal is found sometimes in rocks, and in We acknowledge a man to be mad or me- soine places not inuch unlike the stirious or stil. lancholy who fancies himself to be glass, and so

Heidious dependencies of ice.

Broers. is afraid of stirring; or, taking himself to be

STIRP. n. so stirps, Lat.] Race ; family; wax, dares not let the sun shine upon him. Lav. 2. To be in motion ; not to be stili; to

generation. Not used. ;

Sundry nations got footing in that land, of the pass from inactivity to motion.

which there yet remain divers great families and The great Judge of all knows every different

stirps.

Speaser. degree of human improvement, from these weak Democracies are less subject to sedition than stirrings and tendencies of the will, which have

when there are stirps of nobles.

Bacon. not yet formed themselves into regular purposes, All nations of might and fame resorted thither; to the last entire consummation of a good habit. of whom we have some stirps and little tribes Spectator. with us at this day,

Besos. 3. To become the object of notice. STIRRER. 1. s. [from stir.]

If they happen to have any superiour charac- 1. One who is in motion ; one who puts ter, they fancy they have a right to talk freely

in motion. upon every thing that stirs or appears. Watts. 4. To rise in the morning. This is a col

2. A viser in the morning. loquial and familiar use.

Cone on ; gwe me your hand, sir; an early

stirrer. If the gentlewoman that attends the generals,

Sbakspeare.

3. An inciter; an instigator. wife be stirring, tell her there's one Cassio ene treats of her a little favour of speech. Sbatspeare.

4. STIRRER up. An inciter; an instigator. STIR. n. s. (stur, Runick, a battle; ystwrf,

A perpetual spring, not found elsewhere but

in the Indies only, by reason of the sun's neiginoise, Welsh.]

bourhood, the life and stirrer up of nature in a 1. Tumult ; bustle.

perpetual activity,

Raleigh What hallooing and what stir is chis to-day? Will it not reflect on thy character, Nic, te These are my mates, that make their wills their

turn barreter in thy old days; a stirrer wp of law,

quarrels betrixe thy neighbours ? Arbuthnot. Have some unhappy passenger in chace. Sbaks. Tumultuous stirs upon this strife ensue.

STIRRU P. n. s. [rrigerap, szinap; from

Drayton. rrizan, Saxon, to climb, and hap, a He hach spun a fair thread, to make all this cord.] An iron hoop suspended by a stir for such a necessity as no man ever denied! strap, in which the horseman sets his

Bishop Bramball.

foot when he mounts or rides. Tell, said the soldier, miserable sir,

Neither is his manner of mounting unseemin, Why all aese words, this clamour, and this stir?

though he lack stirrups; for in his getting up, Why do disputes in wrangling spend the day?

his horse is still going, whereby he gaineth way: Denbai.

and therefore the stirrup was called so in scorr, The great stirs of the disputing world are but

as it were a stay to get up; bemg derived of the the conflicts of the humours.

Glanville,

old English word sty, which is to get up, of After all this stir about them, they are good for nothing. Tillotson.

Spenser.

Hast thou not kiss'd my hand, and held my Consider, after so much stir about genus and

siirrup?

Shats are species, how few words we have yet settled de

His horse hiped with an old mothy saddle, finitions of.

Locke. Silence is usually worse than the fiercest and

the stirrups of no kindred. Shakspeare.

My friend, judge not me, loudest accusations; since it proceeds from a Thou seest I judge not thee. kind of numbness or stupidity of conscience, and

Between the stirrup and the ground, an absolute dominion obtained by sin over the

Mercy I ask'd, mercy I found. Camin, soul, so that it shall not so much as dare to com

At this the knight began to chear up, plain or make a stir.

South.

And, raising up himself on stirrup, 2. Commotion ; publick disturbance ; tu- Cried out, Victoria.

Hudibres. multuous disorder ; seditious nproar. TOSTITCH. v. a.[sticke, Danish; stickeri,

Whensoever the earl shall die, all those lands Dutch.) ale to come unto her majesty; he is like to make à foul stir there, though of himself of no power,

1. To sew; to work with a needle on any yet through supportance of some others who lie

thing. in the wind.

Spenser. 2. To join ; to unite, generally with some He did make these stirs, grieving that the degree of clumsiness or inaccuracy.

mount.

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Having stitched together these animadversions 1. The trunk; the body of a plant. touching architecture and their ornaments.

That furious beast

Wotton. His precious horn, sought of his enemies, 3. To STITCH up. To mend what was Strikes in the stock, ne thence can be releas'd. rent.

Spenser. It is in your hand as well to stitch up his life

There is hope of a tree, if cut down, that it again, as it was before to rent it. Sidney.

will sprout again, though the root wax old in the I with a needle and thread stitched up the

earth, and the stock die in the ground.

Job. artery and the wound.

Wiseman. 2. The trunk into which a graft is inserted. TO STITCH. v. n. To practise needle

The cion over-ruleth the stock quite; and the

stock is passive only, and giveth aliment but no work.

motion to the gratt.

Bacon. STITCH. n. s. (from the verb.]

As fruits ungrateful to the planter's care, 1. A pass of the needle and thread through On savage stocks inserted, learn to bear; any thing.

The surest virtues thus from passions shoot, 2. [from stician, Saxon.] A sharp lanci. Wild nature's vigour working at the root. Pope. nating pain.

3. A log; a post. If you desire the spleen, and will laugh your

That they kept thy truth so pure of old, self into stitcbes, follow me; yond gull Malvolio When all our fathers worshipp'd stocks and is turned heathen, a very renegado. Sbakspeare.

stones, A simple bloody spucation of the lungs is dif- Forget not.

Milton. ferenced from a pleurisy, which is ever painful,

Why all this fury? What's the matter, and attended with a stitch.

Harvey.

That oaks must come from Thrace to dance? 3. A link of yarn in knitting:

Must stupid stocks be taught to flatter?

And is there no such wood in France ! Prior. There fell twenty stitches in his stocking.

Molleux. 4. A man proverbially stupid. 4. In Chapman it seems to mean furrows What tyranny is this, my heart to thrall,

And eke my tongue with proud restraint to tie, or ridges.

That neither I may speak nor think at all, Many men at plow he made, and drave earth

But like a stupid stock in silence die? Spenser. here and there,

While we admire And turn'd up stitcbes orderly. Clapman. This virtue and this moral discipline, 5. In the following line, allusion is made Let's be no stoicks, nor no stocks. Sbakspeare. to a knit stock.

s. The handle of any thing. - A stitch-fall'n cheek, that hangs below the

6. A support of a ship while it is building. jaw,

Fresh supplies of ships, Such wrinkles as a skilful hand would draw

And such as fitted since the fight had been, For an old grandam ape.

Dryden.

Or new from stocks were fall'n into the road. Sri'TCHERY. n. s. [from stitch.] Needle

Dryden, work. In contempt.

7. [stocco, a rapier, Italian.) A thrust ; a Come, lay aside your stitcbery; play the idle

stoccado. housewife with me this afternoon. Stakspeare. To see thee here, to see thee there; to see thee STI'TCHWORT.n. s. [anthemis.] Camo- pass thy puncto, thy stock, thy reverse. Shaks. mile.

Ainsworth. 8. Something made of linen ; a cravat ; a STI'THY. . S. (stedie, Islandick, stid, close neckcloth. Anciently a cover for hard, Saxon.] An anvil ; the iron body

the leg, now stocking. on which the smith forges his work.

His lackey with a linen stock on one leg, and My imaginations are as foul

a kersey buot-hose on the other. Sbakspeare, As Vulcan's stitby.

Shakspeare. 9. A race; a lineage ; a family.

Say what stock he springs of.TO SUVE. v. a. (supposed of the same

-The noble house of Marcius.

Slakspears. original with stew.)

His carly virtues to that ancient stock 1. To stuff up close.

Gave as much honour as from thence he took. You would admire, if you saw them stive it in

Waller. their ships.

Sandy's.

The like shall sing 2. To make hot or sultry:

All prophecy, that of the royal stock His chamber was commonly stived with friends Of David, so I name this king, shall rise or suitors of one kind or other. Wotton, A son, the woman's seed.

Milton. Sriver. n. s. (Dutch.] A Dutch coin Thou hast seen one world begin and end, about the value of a halfpenny.

And man, as from a second stock, proceed. Milt.

To no human stock STOAT, n. s. A small stinking animal.

We owe this fierce unkindness; but the rock, Sro'cAH. 1. s. [Irish ; stochk, Erse.] An That cloven rock, produc'd thee. Waller.

attendant; a wallet-boy; one who runs Thy mother was no goddess, nor thy stock at a horseman's foot; a horseboy. Not

From Dardanus; but in some horrid rock, in use.

Perndious wretch! rough Caucasus thee bred.

Denham. He holdeth himself a gentleman, and scorneth to work, which he saith is the life of a peasant;

10. The principal; capital store; fund but thenceforth becometh an horseboy or a already provided. siceab to some kern, inuring himself to hissword,

Prodigal men and the gentlemanly trade of stealing. Spenser. Feel not their own stock wasting.

Let the exportation of home commodities be STOCCA'Do, n. s. (stoccato, from stocco, a

more in value than the importation of foreigni, rapier, Ital.] A thrust with the rapier.

so the st ck of the kingdom shall yearly increase; You stand on discance, your passes, stoccudos, for then the balance of trade must be returned and I know not what.

Shakspeare.
in money or bullion.

Bacon. STOCK. n. s. (rroc, Saxon ; stock, Dut. A king, against a storm, must foresee to a

Bucont. estor, French.]

convenient stock of treasure,

Ben Fonson.

*T is the place where God promises and de- 3. To put in the stocks. See STOCKS. lights to dispense larger proportions of his favour, Call not your stocks for me: I serve the king, that he may fix a mark ot honour on his sanc- On whose employment I was sent to you: wary, and recommend it to the sons of men,fon You shall do sinall respect, shew too bold malice the stock of their own interest as weli as his own Against the grace and person of my master, glory.

South.
Stocking his messenger.

Sbakspene. Scine honour of your own acquire;

4. To Srock up. To extirpate. Add to that stock, which justly we bestow, Of those blest shades to whom you all things owe.

The wild boar not only spoils her branches,

but stocks up her roots. Decay of Piety.

Dryden. STO'CKDOVE. n. so Yet was she not profuse, but fear'd to waste,

(palumbes.] Ring And wisely manag'd that the stock might last;

dove. That all mighc be supplied, and she not guicve,

Stock.loves and turtle; tell their am'rous pain, When crowds appear'd, she had not to relieve;

And, from the lofty elmış, of love complain. Which to prevent, she still increas'd her store;

Dryden. Laid up, and spar'd, that she might give the more. STO'CKFISH. n. s. (stockevisch, Dutch.)

Dryden. Dried cod, so called from its hardness. Beneath one law bees live,

STOCKGI'LLYFLOWER. 1. s. [leucoium, And with one common stock their traffick drive:

Lat.) A plant.

ililer. Al is the state's, the state provides for all.

Dryden.

STOCKING. 1. s. [The original word Nor do those ills on single bodies prey;

seems to be stock ; whence stocks, a priBut oftner bring the nation to decay,

son for the legs. Stock, in the old lan. And sweep the present stock and future hope

guage, made the plural stocken, which away.

Diyden. was used for a pair of siocks or covers If parents die without actually transferring their right to another, why does it not return

for the legs. Stocken was in time taken to the common stock of mankind? Lecke. for a singular, and pronounced stocking.

When we brought it out, it took such a quan- The like corruption has happened to tity of air into its lungs, that it swelled almost chick, chicken, chickens.] The covering twice as big as,betore; and it was perhaps on of the leg. this stock of air that it lived a minute longer In his first approach 'before my lady he will the second time.

Addison,

come to her in yellow stockings, and 't is a colour Be ready to give and glad to distribute, by set

she abhors.

Sbakspeare. ting apart something out of thy st ck for the use

By the loyalty of that town, he procured shoes, of some charities.

diterbury.

stockings, and money for his soldiers. Clarendo. Of those stars, which our imperfect eye

Unless we should expect that nature should Has doond and fix'd in one eternal sky,

make jerkins and stockings grow out of the Each, by a native si ck of bonow great,

ground, what could she do better than afford us May dalt strong iniluence, and diftuse kind heat.

so fit materials for clothing as the wool of sheep? Prior.

Mrre. They had lay-suits; but, though they spent He spent half a day to look for his odů siecka their income, they never mortgaged the stock.

ing, when he had them boin upon a leg. L'Estr. Arbuthnot.

At am'rous Flavio is the sázeking thrown; She has divided part of her estate amongst That very night he longs to lie alune.

Papa thein, that every one may be charitable out of

The families of farmers live in tilth and nas je their own stuch, and each of them take it in their

ness, without a shoe or stocking to their teet. turns to provide for the poor and sick of the pas

Souift. Tish.

Low.

TO STO'CKING. 1. a. (from the noun.] II. Quantity; store ; body.

To dress in stockings. He proposes to himself no small steek of fime

Stocking'd with loads of fat town dirt he goes. in future ages, in being the first who has under. taken this dusign. Arbuthnot.

Dryde.

STO'CSJOBBER. ». s. (stock and job. A 12. A fund established by the government, low wretch, who gets money by buying

of which the value rises and falls by ar- and selling shares in the funds. tifice or chance.

The stockj.bber thus tiun 'Change-alley goes An artificial wealth of funds and stocks was in

down, the hands of those who had been plundering the And oii's you the freeman a wink; publick.

Swijt. Let me have but your vote to serve for the Statesman ard patrict ply alike the stocks, Peeress and butici share ulike the box. Pope. And here is a guinea to drink. Ssrift.

Hard ; TOS: OCK. v. a. (from the noun.]

blockish. I. To stole; 10 fill sufficiently.

If a man will commit such rules to his memory, and stock his hand with portions of scripture

Did feign that Orpheus drew trees, stones, and

fisod:; answira e to all the heads of duty, his conscien

Since nought so stockisb, hard, and full of rage,

Soutb. can netti be at a luss.

But niusick for the time doth change his nature. I, who ut ore uiti. stiejserds in the groves Sung toiley Ouiunripe itur rural lovos,

Sbakspesia Manu d the glebe, and stock the fruitful plain. SroʻCKI OCK. n. s. (stock and lock.) Lock

Dryden. fixed in wood. The would be n to be stocked wit. peoyle, There are locks for several purposes; as street aj & uman industry wiail.cd those uninhabitable

dour-locks, called stockland's'; 'chaniber-deos burnel.

locks, Called spring-locks; and cupbuard-locks. Sp: 1185 and rivers are by large supplies con

Moxon. tinually stocked with water. Woodeverd'. STOCKS. n. s. [commonly without the 2. To lay up in b.vie: as, he stocks what singular See SiOCKING.] he cannot us!"

I Prison for the legs.

town,

..]

The poet

pites.

noon.

Pope.

Fetch forth the stocks:

Is 't near dinner time? I would it were, As I have life and honour, there shall he sit till That you might kill your stomach on your meat,

Shakspeare. And not upon your maid. Sbakspeare. Tom is whipe from cything to tything, stock- Instead of trumpet and of drum, punished, and imprisoned. Shakspeare.

That makes the warrior's stomach come. Butler. Matrimony is expressed by a young man stand- 5. Sullenness; resentment ; stubbornness. ing, his legs being fase in a pair of stocks. Peacbam. Some of the chiefest laity professed with great

The stocks hinder his legs from obeying the er stomach their judgments, that such a discidetermination of his mind, if it would transfer pline was little better than popish tyranny dishis body to another place.

Locke.
guised under a new form.

Hooker, 2. Wooden work upon which ships are They plainly saw, that when stomach doch built.

strive with wit, the match is not equal. Hooker. STOCKSTI'LL. adj. [stock and still.] Mo

Whereby the ape in wondrous stomach wox, tionless as logs.

Strongly encourag'd by the crafry foxSpenser.

That nobles should such stomacbo bear! Qur preachers stand stockstill in the pulpit, and will not so much as move a finger to set off

I myself tight not once in forty year. Sbaksp. the best sermon.

Addison.

It stuck in the camel's stomach, that bulls should

be armed with horns, and that a creature of his Sroke, Stoak, seem to come from the

size should be left defenceless. L'Estrange, Saxon stocce, signifying the stock or Not courage, but stomach, that makes people body of a tree.

Gibson. break rather than they will bend. L'Estrange. STOLE, N.s. (stola, Lat.? A long vest. This sort of crying proceeding from pride, obOver all a black stolas he did chrow,

stinacy, and stomach, the will, where the faule As one that inly mourned.

Spenser.
lies, naust be bent.

Locke.
The solemn feast of Ceres now was near, 6. Pride; haughtiness.
When long white linen stoles the matrons wear. Arius, a subtile-witted and a marvellous fair-

Dryden. spoken man, was discontented that one should be Stole. The preterit of steal.

placed before him in honour, whose superior he A factor stole a gem away.

thought himself in desert, because through envy STOLEN. The participle passive of steal.

and stomach prone unto contradiction. Hooker.

He was a man Stalen waters are sweet, and bread eaten in secret is pleasant.

Proveris.

Of an unbounded stomach, ever ranking
Himself with princes.

Sbakspeares STOLIDITY. n. s. (stolidus, Lat. stolidité, TO STOʻMACH. v. a. (stomachor, Latin.] Fr.) Stupidity; want of sense.

To resent ; to remember with anger and These are the fools in the text, indocile untractable fools, whose stolidity can baffle all ar

malignity. guments.

Bentley.

Believe not all; or, if you must believe,
Stomach not all.

Sbakspeare. STOʻMACH. n. s. [estomach, Fr. stoma. Jonathan loved David, and the people applaudchus, Latin.]

ed him; only Saul stomacbed him, and therefore hated him.

Hell. 1. The ventricle in which food is di

The lion began to shew his teeth, and to stogested.

macb the affront.

L'Estrange.
If you 're sick at sea,

TO STOMACH. v. n. To be angry.
Or stomach qualm'd at land, a dram of this
Will drive away distemper. Sbakspeare.

Let a man, though never so justly, oppose

himself unto those that are disordered in their This filthy simile, this beastly line, Quite turns my stomach.

ways, and what one amongst them commonly

deth not stomach at such contradiction, storm at 2. Appetite ; desire of food.

reproof, and hate such as would reform them? Tell me, what is 't that takes from thee

Hooker. Thy stomacb, pleasure, and thy golden sleep?

Sbakspeare.

SrO'M ACHED. adj. [from stomach.) Filled Will fortune never come with both hands full,

with passions of rekentment. But write her fair words still in foulest letters? High stomach'd are they both, and full of ire; She either gives a stomacb, and no food;

In rage deaf as the sea, basty as tire. Sbakspo Such are the poor in health: or else a feast,

Sto's ACHER. n. s. [from stomach ) An And takes away the stomacb; such the rich, That have abundance and enjoy it not. Sbaksp;

ornamental covering worn by women on As appetite or stomach to meat is a sign of

the breast. health in the body, so is this hunger in the soul

Golden quoifs and stomacbers, a vital quality, an evidence of some life of grace

For my lads to give their dears. Sbakspeare. in the heart; whereas decay of appetite, and the

Instead of a stomacher, a girding of sackclock.

Isaiatu Do manner of stomach, is a most desperate prognostick.

Hammonda

Thou marry':- every year 3. Inclination; liking.

The lyrick lark and the grave whispering dove, He which hath no siomach to this fight,

The sparrow that neglects his life for love,
Sbakspeare.
The houschold bird with the red stomacher.

Donne. The unusual distance of time made it subject SrO'NACHFUL. adj. (stomachosus, Lat. to every man's note, that it was an act against his stomach, and put upon him by necessity of

stomach and full] Sullen ; stubborn ;

Bacon, very trade went against his stomach.

A stomach ful boy, put to school, the whole

L'Estrange. world could not bring to pronounce the first let[stomachus, Lat.] Anger ; violence of ter.

L'Estrange,

Obstinate or stomachful crying should not be Disdain he called was, and did disdain

permitted, because it is another way of encouie To be so call’d, and who so did him call:

raging those passions which 't is our business to Stern was his look, and full of stonrich vain,

locke. His portance terrible, and stature tall. Spen:er. STOʻMACHFULNESS. n. s. [from stomacia.

subdue.

Popes

Let him depart.

state.

The

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temper.

STON A'CHICAL.} ad relating to the sto

a

a

Paper

ful.] Stubbornness; sullenness; ob- the seed, and is itself contained in the .

fruit. . [] To make fruits without core or stone is a Clu riosity.

Bacoa. mach; pertaining to the stomach. 7. Testicle,

An hypochondriack consumption is an ex- 8. A weight containing fourteen pounds. tenuation, occasioned by an infarction and ob- A stone of meat is eight pounds. struction of the stomachick vessels through me- Does Wood think that we will sell him a stone lancholy humours.

Harvey.
of wool for his counters?

Swift By a catarrh the stomacbical ferment is via

9. A runeral monument. tiated.

Floyer.

Should some relenting eye STOMA'CHICK. n. s. [from stomach.] A Glance on the stone where our cold reliques lie. medicine for the stomach.

Pope. STO'M ACHLESS. adj. (stomach and less.] 10. It is taken for a state of torpidness and Being without appetite.

insensibility: STOMACHous, adj. (stomachosus, Latin.] I have not yet forgot myself to stone. Popes

Stout; angry; sullen; obstinate. Ob- II. STONE is used by way ui exaggerasolete.

tion. That stranger knight in presence came,

What need you be so boist'rous rough? And goodly salved them; but nought again

I will not struggle, I will stand store stiil. Sbaks. Him answered, as courtesy became;

And there lies Whaсum by my side, But with stern looks, and stonacbous disdain,

Stone dead, and in his own bland dyed. Hudil. Gave signs of grudge and discontentment vain.

The fellow held his breath, and lay stone stiil, Spenser. as it he was d-ad.

L'Estrange; STOND. n. s. [for stand.)

She had gor a trick of holding her train, ad

lying at her length for sion: de... L'Estraige. 1. Post ; station. Obsolete.

The cottagers, having tice: a country-dance On th’ other side, ch'assieged castle's ward

together, had been all out, and scood stone sord Their stedfast stonds did mightily maintain. with amazement.

Spenser.

12. To kave na Stone unturn.d. Todo 2. Stop ; indisposition to proceed. There bo not stonds nor resiiveness in a man's

every thing that can be done for the pronature; but the wheels of his mind keep way

duction or promotion of any effect. with the wheels of his fortune.

Bacon.

Women, that left no store untura'd,

In which the cause might be concern'd, STONE. 1. s. [stains, Gothick; stan, Brought in their childien's spoons and whistles, Saxon; steen, Dutch.

To purchase swords, carbines, and pistols. Hudib. $. Stones are bodies insipid, hard, not duc- lie crimes invented, left unturn'a ne store tile or malleable, nor soluble in watır.

To make my guilt appear, and hide his own.

Dryden. Woodcard. the softer and the harder. Of the

STONE, adj. Made of stone,

Present her at the leet, softer stories are, 1. The foliaceous or flaky, as

Because she bought sione juos, and no seald talk. 2. The fibrose, as the asbestus. . The

quarts.

Sbakspeare. granulatt, as the gypsum. Of the barder stones are, 1. Toe opake stones, as limestone. 2. The TO STONE. v. a. (from the noun.] senii-pelli:cid, as agate. 3. The pellucid, as cry- 1. To pel", or beai, or kill witi stones. stal and the gems.

Hill.

These people be almost ready to stone me. Five sharp smooth stones from the next brook he chose,

Crucifixion was a punishment unknown to the And fits there to his sling.

Cowley Jerish laws, among whom the stoning Relentless time, destroying power,

wis the punishment for blasphemy. Stef betido Whom stone and brass obcy.

Parnell.

2. To barder. 2. Piece of stone cut for building,

Oh perjur'd woman! thou dost store my heart; Should I go to church,

And mak'st me call what I intend to do And see the holy edifice of storil,

A murder, which I thought a sacritice. Shakse: And not bethink me straight of dang'rous rocks!

Shaksparc

. STO'NEBRE A K.n...(saxifraga anglicand.) The English used the stones to'reinforce the An berb. pier.

Hayward. STO'NECHATTER. n. s. (rubetra, Latino) 3 Gem; precious stone.

A hird.
I thought I saw

STOʻNECRAY.n. s. A distemper in hawks,
Wedges of gola, great anchors, heaps of pearl,
Inestimable stones, unvalued jewels. Sbakspeare,

STO'NECROP. 2. S. A sort of tree. 4. Any thing made of stone.

Storcrop tree is a beautiful tree, but not com Lend me a looking-glass; If that her breath will misr or stain the stone, STO'NECUTTER. 1. s. [from stone and cnt. Why then she lives.'

Sbakspeare. ter.] One whose trade is to hew stones. 5. Calculous concretion in the kidneys or A stonecutter's man had the vesiculæ of his bladder; the disease arising from a lungs so stupied with dusi, that, in cutting, the calculus.

kotic went as it through a heap of said. A specifick icmedy for preventing of the stone Míy prosecutor provided me a monument at I take to be the constant use of ale hoof-ale.

the stonecuiter's, and would have crected it in Ermile.

the parish-church. A gentleman supposed his difficulty in erung SI'O'NEFERN. n. s. A plant. Air scuoribo proceeded t:om the siuni.

Wiser:an. STONEFLY. 11. s. Au insect. Hinsverth. b. Tie cuburich in some fruits contains Sto'xEFRUIT. n. so '[stone and fruis.)

Stones are,

Exedys,

to death

Ainsworth.

dinsworth.

mon.

Mortimer.

Derb,

Szrift.

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