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staddlemore about staddle

staddle


  3  definitions  found 
 
  From  Webster's  Revised  Unabridged  Dictionary  (1913)  [web1913]: 
 
  Staddle  \Stad"dle\,  n.  [AS.  sta[eth]ol,  sra[eth]ul,  a 
  foundation,  firm  seat;  akin  to  E.  stand  [root]163.  See 
  {Stand},  v.  i.]  [Formerly  written  {stadle}.] 
  1.  Anything  which  serves  for  support;  a  staff;  a  prop;  a 
  crutch;  a  cane. 
 
  His  weak  steps  governing  And  aged  limbs  on  cypress 
  stadle  stout.  --Spenser. 
 
  2.  The  frame  of  a  stack  of  hay  or  grain.  [Eng.] 
 
  3.  A  row  of  dried  or  drying  hay,  etc  [Eng.] 
 
  4.  A  small  tree  of  any  kind  especially  a  forest  tree. 
 
  Note:  In  America,  trees  are  called  staddles  from  the  time 
  that  they  are  three  or  four  years  old  till  they  are  six 
  or  eight  inches  in  diameter,  or  more  This  is  also  the 
  sense  in  which  the  word  is  used  by  Bacon  and  Tusser. 
 
  From  Webster's  Revised  Unabridged  Dictionary  (1913)  [web1913]: 
 
  Staddle  \Stad"dle\,  v.  t. 
  1.  To  leave  the  staddles,  or  saplings,  of  as  a  wood  when  it 
  is  cut.  [R.]  --Tusser. 
 
  2.  To  form  into  staddles,  as  hay.  [Eng.] 
 
  From  WordNet  r  1.6  [wn]: 
 
  staddle 
  n  :  a  base  or  platform  on  which  hay  or  corn  is  stacked 




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