¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Stridden
1. stride [v] - See also: stride
Lexicographical Neighbors of Stridden
Literary usage of Stridden
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Vital Records of Gill, Massachusetts, to the Year 1850 by Gill, Mass, Gill (Mass. : Town) (1904)
"... stridden, Stricklin), Esther, 25, d. Warren and Emily, and Almon Caswell, Dec.
... Strickland, stridden), Joseph of Granvil, and Hannah Wrisley, int. ..."
2. An English Grammar: Methodical, Analytical, and Historical. With a Treatise by Eduard Adolf Ferdinand Maetzner (1874)
"The preterite »lade is in use in Northern dialects, as in Scotland in Ramsay.
11. stride; strode, strid; stridden, strid (WEBSTER). ..."
3. Russia on the Pacific, and the Siberian Railway by Zenone Volpicelli (1899)
"short interval she has stridden across the continent, and is now at Port Arthur
preparing for the locomotive from St. Petersburg.' Here we have a prominent ..."
4. Russia on the Pacific, and the Siberian Railway by Zenone Volpicelli (1899)
"short interval she has stridden across the continent, and is now at Port Arthur
preparing for the locomotive from St. Petersburg.' Here we have a prominent ..."
5. A New Dictionary of the Italian and English Languages Based Upon that of by Giuseppe Marco Antonio Baretti, John Davenport, Guglielmo Comelati (1873)
"stridden, part, del verbo to stride. Stride, s. gran passa, in. With long strides,
a gran ... To Stride, vn (pass, strid, strode, part, strid, stridden,) 1. ..."
6. A new dictionary of the Italian and English languages, based upon that of by John Davenport, Giuseppe Marc' Antonio Baretti, Guglielmo Comelati (1854)
"Strid, pass, e part, del verbo to stride. stridden, part, ilel ... (pass, strid,
strode, part, strid, stridden,) ..."
7. An English Grammar: Methodical, Analytical, and Historical. With a Treatise by Eduard Adolf Ferdinand Maetzner (1874)
"11. stride; strode. strid; stridden, ... Old-English striden; sing, strod, strode,
plur. striden; striden, stridden, strid. Northern dialects have the ..."