释义 |
▪ I. stoved, ppl. a.1|stəʊvd| [f. stove v.1 + -ed1.] †1. Of a fire: Kept burning in a stove. Obs.
1693Evelyn De La Quint. Compl. Gard., Direct. Melons Advt. 4 It is certain, that a Naked or Stov'd Fire, pent up within the House,..must needs be extreamly Noxious and Pernicious to these Delicate and Tender Plants. 2. Sc. Of meat or vegetables: Stewed.
1728Ramsay Fables, Monk & Miller's Wife 133 The stov'd or roasted we afford Are aft great strangers on our board. 1756M. Calderwood in Coltness Collect. (Maitl. Club) 149 All sorts of stewes or stoved things. 1867J. K. Hunter Retrosp. Artist's Life i. (1912) 10 She gave me my dinner of stoved potatoes. 3. Heated by a stove. Also, kept in a heated room.
1802Beddoes Hygeia v. 60 The carpeted, stuccoed, and stoved sitting room. a1835McCulloch Attributes (1837) III. xliii. 147 It is no trial to bring a caged and stoved animal from a hot climate and then to decide that it cannot live out of a stove. 4. Dried in a stove or oven. stoved salt: see quot. 1892.
1800Henry Epit. Chem. (1808) 182 The various forms under which it [common salt] appears, of stoved salt, fishery salt, bay salt, &c. arise rather from differences in the size and compactness of the grain than [etc.]. 1808H. Holland Agric. Cheshire in W. H. Marshall Rev. Rep. Agric. (1810) II. 93 In making the stoved, or lump salt, as it is called, the brine is brought to a boiling heat. 1852Fincham Shipbuilding iii. (ed. 3) 32 It was found that the stoved planks were fresher and tougher. 1880Daily News 28 Oct. 3/8 Sugar... Stoved goods and Paris loaves continue firm. 1892Labour Commission Gloss., Stoved Salt, boiled salt drawn out of the pans, put into wooden moulds, and afterwards taken into the stoves or hot-houses for the purpose of being thoroughly dried. All table salt is stoved salt. 5. stoved enamel = stove enamel s.v. stove n.1 6.
1926–7Army & Navy Stores Catal. 311 The patent ‘Peveril’ grate..in best bright black stoved enamel, which does not require blackleading. 1967Times Rev. Industry May 53/3 A good deal of paint is exported as the cellulose finish of a car, the stoved enamel surface of a washing machine or the paintwork of a jet airliner. ▪ II. stoved, ppl. a.2 = stove, stoven ppl. adjs.
1798O'Keeffe Wild Oats i. i, I'm as empty as a stoved keg. |