Definition of Stiming

1. stime [v] - See also: stime

Lexicographical Neighbors of Stiming

stiltings
stiltish
stilts
stiltwalker
stiltwalkers
stilty
stilyard
stilyards
stim
stime
stimed
stimes
stimie
stimied
stimies
stiming (current term)
stimmed
stimming
stims
stimulability
stimulable
stimulant
stimulant drug
stimulants
stimulate
stimulated
stimulated emission depletion microscope
stimulated emission depletion microscopy
stimulates
stimulateth

Literary usage of Stiming

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Proceedings by American Society of Civil Engineers (1902)
"... or of as- sTiming that the specified maintenance price would apply alike to Broadway and to a short residential street in the Borough of the Bronx, ..."

2. Darkness and Daylight; Or, Lights and Shadows of New York Life: A Woman's by Helen Campbell, Thomas Wallace Knox, Thomas Byrnes (1892)
"Listening to the speeches of the men, and fanning to bring some breath of coolness into the stiMing air, I heard from the upper rooms of this tenement-house ..."

3. Chemistry in America: Chapters from the History of the Science in the United by Edgar Fahs Smith (1914)
"... and that besides its ordinary condition it is capable of as- stiming another highly active state when its properties resemble those of Chlorine. ..."

4. The British Drama: A Collection of the Most Esteemed Tragedies, Comedies (1859)
"Osm. [StiMing her.] This to thy heart—'Tis nol the traitor meets thee ; Tu the belray'd—who writes it in thy blood. Zar. O gracious Heaven ! receive my ..."

5. A Ramble Through the United States, Canada, and the West Indies by John Shaw (1856)
"Can poetry spring out of an amalgam so monstrous and revolting ? Can its pure spirit breathe in an air so stiming and foetid ? ..."

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