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Tuesday - May 29, 2012

Webster's Unabridged Dictionary: Library in Itself

The dictionary's 1913 edition of the 1900 International, renamed Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, has in modern times been used in various free online resources, as its copyright lapsed and it became public domain.
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Stout

Stout (stout)
a.(?)
Stout
[Compar. Stouter (?)] superl. Stoutest.] [D. stout bold (or OF. estout bold, proud, of Teutonic origin); akin to AS. stolt, G. stolz, and perh. to E. stilt.]
  1. Strong; lusty; vigorous; robust; sinewy; muscular; hence, firm; resolute; dauntless.

    With hearts stern and stout. Chaucer.

    A stouter champion never handled sword. Shak.

    He lost the character of a bold, stout, magnanimous man. Clarendon.

    The lords all stand
    To clear their cause, most resolutely stout.
    Daniel.

  2. Proud; haughty; arrogant; hard.
    [Archaic]

    Your words have been stout against me. Mal. iii. 13.

    Commonly . . . they that be rich are lofty and stout. Latimer.

  3. Firm; tough; materially strong; enduring; as, a stout vessel, stick, string, or cloth.
  4. Large; bulky; corpulent.

    Syn. -- Stout, Corpulent, Portly. Corpulent has reference simply to a superabundance or excess of flesh. Portly implies a kind of stoutness or corpulence which gives a dignified or imposing appearance. Stout, in our early writers (as in the English Bible), was used chiefly or wholly in the sense of strong or bold; as, a stout champion; a stout heart; a stout resistance, etc. At a later period it was used for thickset or bulky, and more recently, especially in England, the idea has been carried still further, so that Taylor says in his Synonyms: "The stout man has the proportions of an ox; he is corpulent, fat, and fleshy in relation to his size." In America, stout is still commonly used in the original sense of strong as, a stout boy; a stout pole.


Stout

Stout (stout)
n.
Stout
  1. A strong malt liquor; strong porter.
    Swift.













Webster's Unabridged Dictionary: Library in Itself

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May 29, 2012
[12:00:01 AM] (PDT)


  0.013880968093872|May 29, 2012 => 11:22 pm