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Showing 1-50 of 143 results

Stone Age English-German

Steinzeit

carve in wood/stone in carve English-German

in Holz schnitzen/in Stein meißeln

kill sth. stone-dead in stone-dead English-German

etw. völlig zunichte machen

a stone's throw [away] in stone English-German

nur einen Steinwurf weit entfernt

stone British & World English

hard solid non-metallic mineral matter of which rock is made, especially as a building material

stone English-French

pierre f

stone English-Italian

pietra f

stone2 English-Spanish

apedrear, lapidar

Stone, Edward Durell British & World English

(1902–78), US architect. His notable designs include the Museum of Modern Art in New York City 1937–39; the US embassy in New Delhi, India 1954–58; and the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, DC 1964–69

Stone, Harlan Fiske British & World English

(1872–1946), US chief justice 1941–46. He was the dean of the Columbia Law School 1910–24 and, briefly, US attorney general 1924 in President Coolidge’s cabinet before he was appointed to the US Supreme Court as an associate justice 1925–41. He was named chief justice by President Franklin D. Roosevelt

Stone, Lucy British & World English

(1818–93), US feminist and abolitionist. The first woman from Massachusetts to earn a college degree (Oberlin College 1847), she traveled widely during the 1850s lecturing on women’s rights. In 1869, she founded the American Woman Suffrage Association, which merged with the National Woman Suffrage Association in 1890 to form the National American Woman Suffrage Association

Stone, Oliver British & World English

(b.1946), American film director, screenwriter, and producer. He has won Oscars for his adaptation of the novel Midnight Express (1978) and his direction of Platoon (1986) and Born on the Fourth of July (1989), both of which indict American involvement in the Vietnam War

stone me! or stone the crows! in stone British & World English

an exclamation of surprise or shock

Stone Age British & World English

a prehistoric period when weapons and tools were made of stone or of organic materials such as bone, wood, or horn

Bath stone British & World English

a type of oolitic limestone found especially near Bath in SW England, grey to yellowish in colour and used in building and sculpture

Black Stone British & World English

the sacred reddish-black stone built into the outside wall of the Kaaba and ritually touched by Muslim pilgrims

chalk-stone British & World English

a chalky deposit of sodium urate formed in the hands and feet of sufferers from severe gout

china stone British & World English

partly kaolinized granite containing plagioclase feldspar, which is ground and mixed with kaolin to make porcelain

Coade stone British & World English

an artificial stone claimed to have greater resistance to frost and heat than natural stone, formerly much used for statues, decorative work, etc.

fire stone British & World English

stone that can withstand fire and great heat, used especially for lining furnaces and ovens

rune stone British & World English

a large stone carved with runes by ancient Scandinavians or Anglo-Saxons

stone boat British & World English

a flat-bottomed sled used for transporting stones and other heavy objects

stone broke British & World English

North American term for stony broke.

stone china British & World English

a kind of very hard earthenware resembling porcelain

stone crab British & World English

a large, heavy, edible crab of the Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean area

stone face British & World English

a face that reveals no emotions

stone fruit British & World English

a fruit with flesh or pulp enclosing a stone, such as a peach, plum, or cherry

stone lily British & World English

a fossilized sea lily

stone pine British & World English

an umbrella-shaped southern European pine tree with large needles, very large glossy brown cones, and edible seeds (pine nuts)

water stone British & World English

a whetstone used with water rather than oil

stone mason English-French

tailleur m de pierre