¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Stotting
1. stot [v] - See also: stot
Lexicographical Neighbors of Stotting
Literary usage of Stotting
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Cyclopædic Dictionary of the Mang'anja Language Spoken in British Central by David Clement Ruffelle Scott (1892)
"... as ncha, stotting ; or n (for «</() with cAa particle ; also as nasalised ty =
eh, nek- = nty- ; and with día ka. and =tsa— for which see Nka, Ntsa, &c. ..."
2. Spare Hours by John Brown (1866)
"... —the baby-cuddie,— how pawky and droll and happy he looks with his fuzzy head,
and his laughing eyes, and his long legs, etot, stotting after that ..."
3. Narrative of a Voyage Round the World: Performed in Her Majesty's Ship by Edward Belcher, Richard Brinsley Hinds, Great Britain Admiralty (1872)
"If we do come on one, stotting along on her poor goats' feet, she must belong to
quite the lowest of her race. It is chiefly men we meet, and they in shoals ..."
4. Hudson Bay by Robert Michael Ballantyne (1879)
"... anon stotting, in the manner of a recruit in a cavalry regiment as yet
unaccustomed to the saddle, when he trotted on the beaten track; and occasionally ..."
5. Lachesis Lapponica: Or, A Tour in Lapland, Now First Published from the by Carl von Linné, James Edward Smith (1811)
"... A carriage called stotting is used here, for bringing home wood for fuel in
winter, over the ice and snow. It is made of birch- wood, and resembles a ..."