Lexicographical Neighbors of Steaned
Literary usage of Steaned
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Digest of the Criminal Statute Law of England: Alphabetically and by Harold Nuttall Tomlins (1819)
"... or steaned, the whole of which Penalties shall go and be paid, by the Owner
or Packer of such Wool, or other the aforesaid Woollen or Worsted Articles, ..."
2. A Treatise of the Pleas of the Crown: Or, A System of the Principal Matters by William Hawkins, John Curwood (1824)
"... packed, " or steaned, the whole of which penalties shall go-and be paid " by
the owner or packer of such wool, or other the aforesaid " woollen or ..."
3. An Encyclopædia of Architecture: Historical, Theoretical, and Practical by Joseph Gwilt (1842)
"Wells, when above 6 feet in diameter, should be described to be steaned in a
thickness of one brick, and when less than that size, in half a brick. ..."
4. The Annual Register edited by Edmund Burke (1825)
"... being steaned to the bottom with the greatest regularity and compactness; it
is about five feet in diameter, and is upwards of 400 feet deep. ..."
5. The Justice of the Peace, and Parish Officer by Richard Burn (1820)
"... or cause or procure to be put, pressed, packed, or steaned into any butt,
pipe, hogshead, chest or any other cask or vessel, upon any pretence whatever, ..."
6. Dr. William Smith's Dictionary of the Bible: Comprising Its Antiquities by William Smith (1892)
"... which is like a small well, about three feet diameter, and four or five feet
deep, rough- y steaned, in which a fire haa been kept up for several hours. ..."
7. The Fleet: Its River, Prison, and Marriages by John Ashton (1888)
"... found two wells thereon, both steaned in a workmanlike manner; but when, or
for what purpose, they were sunk, he is entirely ignorant. ..."