Stiptic (2)
Stiptic, or Stipticala.stopping or stanching blood
A Compendious Dictionary of the English Language, Noah Webster, 1806.
4.265 entries
Stiptic, or Stipticala.stopping or stanching blood
Stipulaceous, or Stipulara.formed of stipules
Stipulatev.t.to covenant, contract, bargain
Stipulatea.containing stipules
Stipulationn.a contract, agreement, bargain, the situation and structure of the stipules of plants
Stipulen.a leaf or scale at the base of a petiole or peduncle
Stirv.to move, go on, incite, animate, rise
Stirn.a tumult, bustle, agitation, uproar, noise
Stiriousa.resembling or hanging like icicles
Stirpn.a race, family, generation, issue, root, stalk
Stirrern.one in motion, an early riser, an inciter
Stirrupn.a kind of iron for a horseman's foot
Stitchv.t.to sew loosely or slightly
Stitcheryn.needlework, in contempt
Stithyn.an anvil,v.t.to forge on an anvil, ob.
Stivev.t.to shut up quite close, make hot, ob.
Stivern.a Dutch coin about a cent value, a trifle
Stoatn.an animal of the weesel kind, the ermin
Stoccadon.a stab, a thrust with a rapier
Stockn.a log, trunk, linen for the neck, stem, lineage, family, pack, quantity, fund, tally, property or interest in a joint capital or fund, cattle, animals shipped, in W. Indi...
Stockv.t.to store, lay in store, furnish, root up
Stockaden.a sharpened post or stake set in the earth, a line of stockades
Stockadev.t.to fortify with posts
Stockbrokern.a broker who buys and sells stocks
Stockdoven.a bird, ringdove, wood pigeon
Stockfishn.a cod dried very hard without salt
Stockingn.a well known covering for the leg