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Sinew   Listen
noun
Sinew  n.  
1.
(Anat.) A tendon or tendonous tissue. See Tendon.
2.
Muscle; nerve. (R.)
3.
Fig.: That which supplies strength or power. "The portion and sinew of her fortune, her marriage dowry." "The bodies of men, munition, and money, may justly be called the sinews of war." Note: Money alone is often called the sinews of war.



verb
Sinew  v. t.  (past & past part. sinewed; pres. part. sinewing)  To knit together, or make strong with, or as with, sinews. "Wretches, now stuck up for long tortures... might, if properly treated, serve to sinew the state in time of danger."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Sinew" Quotes from Famous Books



... the Vale of Years beneath A griesly troop are seen, The painful family of Death, More hideous than their Queen: This racks the joints, this fires the veins, That every labouring sinew strains, Those in the deeper vitals rage: Lo, Poverty, to fill the band, That numbs the soul with icy hand, ...
— The Golden Treasury - Of the Best Songs and Lyrical Poems in the English Language • Various

... tobacco, a new suit of clothes! And, by way of entr'acte, the girl—"Tramp Wheel-Pad's Jumping Flea," as she was called—turned somersaults and flip-flaps. But she would have killed him, this dark girl with great dark eyes,—this girl with a boy's figure, all muscle and sinew, keeping him awake all night and talking of nothing but smackings, as though she had never learned anything else. And so much in love that she would bite and scratch: a very tigress. Any one but himself would have wearied of it. And then, ...
— The Bill-Toppers • Andre Castaigne

... sad faced quartermaster of the Army of Northern Virginia. And one by one the fat porkers who had muzzled greedily among the ears from the Cary bins and who ought to have gone into the smoke house had departed, squealing, to furnish bone and sinew with which to repel the invader. Saddest of all, the chicken coops down by the deserted negro quarters were quite as empty as the once teeming cabins themselves. Poverty, grim and relentless, had caught the Carys in its iron ...
— The Littlest Rebel • Edward Peple

... she tried all she could to arouse him. At the end of ten days, he turned over, and then lay ten days on the other side. When he got up, he told his sister to make him a snare, for he meant to catch the sun. She said she had nothing; but finally recollected a little piece of dried deer's sinew, that her father had left, which she soon made into a string suitable for a noose. But the moment she showed it to him, he told her it would not do, and bid her get something else. She said she had nothing—nothing at all. At last she thought of her hair, and ...
— The Myth of Hiawatha, and Other Oral Legends, Mythologic and Allegoric, of the North American Indians • Henry R. Schoolcraft

... custom of swearing at Constantinople, as he had done at Antioch, he strained every sinew, and in several sermons he exerted his zeal with uncommon energy, mingled with the most tender charity. In Hom. 8, in Act t. 9, pp. 66, 67, he complains that some who had begun to correct their criminal habit, after ...
— The Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs, and Principal Saints - January, February, March • Alban Butler


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