Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- verb Simple past tense and past participle of
stomach .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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And further, I felt it my duty to prove the white man's wisdom and bring sore distress to Moosu, who had waxed high-stomached, what of the power I had given him.
A HYPERBOREAN BREW 2010
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Unlike the cowardly Melanesians, the people were high-stomached and warlike.
YAH! YAH! YAH! 2010
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Graceful himself in his slender, tall, lean-stomached way, Bert was accounted a good dancer; yet Saxon did not remember ever having danced with him with keen pleasure.
CHAPTER II 2010
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That said, I could have stomached Bennhold's misconceptions and vaguely puritanical air were it not for her sweeping and commonplace throw-away statement: "French women appear to worry about being feminine, not feminist."
Debra Ollivier: What's Wrong with the (Fighting) French? Debra Ollivier 2010
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That said, I could have stomached Bennhold's misconceptions and vaguely puritanical air were it not for her sweeping and commonplace throw-away statement: "French women appear to worry about being feminine, not feminist."
Debra Ollivier: What's Wrong with the (Fighting) French? Debra Ollivier 2010
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But the high-stomached Norman is there and the stubborn Saxon.
Kempton-Wace Letters 2010
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Then it was the men became high-stomached, and revived ancient quarrels, and crossed the divides to the south to kill the Pellys, and to the west that they might sit by the dead fires of the Tananas.
THE LAW OF LIFE 2010
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But one doesn't need to have stomached the unedifying sight and sound of Jenna Bush attempting to read an autocue on Good Morning America to feel a twinge of sarcasm at Monday's announcement.
Chelsea Clinton: in front of the camera, out of the shadows 2011
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So we pulled on, light-stomached and heavy-hearted, with half a thousand miles of snow and silence between us and Haines Mission by the sea.
GRIT OF WOMEN 2010
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That said, I could have stomached Bennhold's misconceptions and vaguely puritanical air were it not for her sweeping and commonplace throw-away statement: "French women appear to worry about being feminine, not feminist."
Debra Ollivier: What's Wrong with the (Fighting) French? Debra Ollivier 2010
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