释义 |
▪ I. staup, n. north.|stɔːp| [f. staup v.] (See quot. 1825.)
1825Jamieson Suppl., Staup 1. A long awkward step, Roxb. 2. A tall awkward person; as ‘Haud aff me, ye muckle lang staup’, ibid. 1897E. W. Hamilton Outlaws of Marches xvii. 185, I was..Never a happer-hippit staup of a thing like yourself. ▪ II. staup, v. north.|stɔːp| Also stoep. [? Altered from step v., with vowel symbolic of awkward movement.] (See quot. 1788.)
1788W. H. Marshall Yorksh. II. 356 To Staup; to lift the feet high, and tread heavily in walking. a1857J. Rayson Misc. Poems (1858) 55 They stoep i' their walking, leyke stegs amang heather. ▪ III. staup variant of stap n. stave of a cask. |