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Steen   /stin/   Listen
noun
Steen  n.  (Written also stean)  
1.
A vessel of clay or stone. "An huge great earth-pot steane."
2.
A wall of brick, stone, or cement, used as a lining, as of a well, cistern, etc.; a steening.



verb
Steen  v. t.  (Written also stean, and stein)  To line, as a well, with brick, stone, or other hard material.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Steen" Quotes from Famous Books



... impetuosity he bounded up the steps, three at a time, and how he scolded Wilkie for trotting up with his usual deliberation. 'I might just as well have scolded the column,' he observes. 'I soon left him at some Jan Steen, while I never stopped until I stood before the "Transfiguration." My first feeling was disappointment. It looked small, harsh and hard. This, of course, is always the way when you have fed your ...
— Little Memoirs of the Nineteenth Century • George Paston

... this elision of a medial consonant appears a Gaelic process; and, curiously enough, I have come across no less than two Gaelic forms: John Macstophane cordinerius in Crossraguel, 1573, and William M'Steen in Dunskeith (co. Ross), 1605. Stevenson, Steenson, Macstophane, M'Steen: which is the original? which the translation? Or were these separate creations of the patronymic, some English, some Gaelic? The curiously compact ...
— Records of a Family of Engineers • Robert Louis Stevenson

... of umpty-steen it seemed as if only one ambition in the world was worth achieving—that was to get out of classes. Most of us had used up our cuts long ago. The Faculty is never any too patient in the spring, anyhow, and a lot of ...
— At Good Old Siwash • George Fitch

... your navigation charts, young gentlemen, you will often find banks and bars thrown up at the mouths of rivers. At the mouth of the Scheldt, several miles from the shore, there are Thornton's Ridge, The Rabs, Schouwen Bank, Steen Banks, and others of similar formation. At the mouth of the Mississippi, in our own country, you are aware that large vessels find great difficulty in getting over the bar. If we take a tumbler full of Mississippi water, after heavy rains in the north-west, ...
— Dikes and Ditches - Young America in Holland and Belguim • Oliver Optic

... felt, nothing; one only thought. Of living creatures only birds came there freely, the sea-birds especially, to attract and detain which there were all sorts of ingenious contrivances about the windows, such as one may see in the cottage sceneries of Jan Steen and others. There was something, doubtless, of his passion for distance in this welcoming of the creatures of the air. An extreme simplicity in their manner of life was, indeed, characteristic of many a distinguished ...
— Imaginary Portraits • Walter Horatio Pater


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