Lexicographical Neighbors of Roating
Literary usage of Roating
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. An Illustrated Flora of the Northern United States: Canada and the British by Nathaniel Lord Britton, Addison Brown (1898)
"Stipules. Appendages to the base of a petiole, often adnate to it. Stipulate.
With stipules. Stolon. A basal branch roating at the nodes. ..."
2. Tracts and Other Papers Relating Principally to the Origin, Settlement, and by Peter Force (1838)
"... and not hire to labor, without going to war to kil Christians for 5 s..
a, week in the mouth of the roaTing Cannon, or in a Siege threatned with famine, ..."
3. Standard Methods of Chemical Analysis: A Manual of Analytical Methods and by Wilfred Welday Scott (1922)
"... in dry carbon dioxide which forms a black, scaly mass.1 Ruthenium dioxide,
RuO2, is obtained by roating the disulphide or sulphate in contact with air. ..."
4. A Dictionary of Archaic and Provincial Words, Obsolete Phrases, Proverbs by James Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps (1850)
"roating. Coarse, rank, as grass. ROB. Jam ; fruit jelly. East. ROBA. Wanton ;
whore ; bona roba. ROUBLE. An instrument used for stirring dough in an oven. ..."
5. Dictionary of Obsolete and Provincial English: Containing Words from the by Thomas Wright (1886)
"... RoATiNG, adj. Coarse and rank. ROB, ». Fruit jelly. Eut. ROBA, ». (Hal.)
A prostitute ; more usually tona roba. ROBBE,к, ». ..."