Pelt+with+stones
31stone — I. n. 1. Rock, pebble, bowlder. 2. Gem, jewel, precious stone. 3. Gravestone, tombstone, monument, cenotaph, monumental tablet. 4. Nut (of a drupe). 5. Vesical calculus. 6. Testicle. 7. A …
32dilapidation — early 15c., from L.L. dilapidationem (nom. dilapidatio) a squandering, noun of action from pp. stem of L. dilapidare throw away, squander, waste, lit. pelt with stones (thus ruin, destroy ) or else scatter like stones, from dis asunder (see DIS… …
33lap|i|date — «LAP uh dayt», transitive verb, dat|ed, dat|ing. 1. to throw stones at; pelt with stones. 2. to stone to death. ╂[< Latin lapidāre (with English ate1) < lapis, idis a stone] …
34dilapidate — verb ( dated; dating) Etymology: Latin dilapidatus, past participle of dilapidare to squander, destroy, from dis + lapidare to pelt with stones, from lapid , lapis stone Date: 1565 transitive verb 1. to bring into a condition of decay or …
35dilapidate — dilapidation, n. dilapidator, n. /di lap i dayt /, v. dilapidated, dilapidating. v.t. 1. to cause or allow (a building, automobile, etc.) to fall into a state of disrepair, as by misuse or neglect (often used passively): The house had been… …
36lapidate — lapidation, n. /lap i dayt /, v.t., lapidated, lapidating. 1. to pelt with stones. 2. to stone to death. [1615 25; < L lapidatus ptp. of lapidare to stone. See LAPIDARY, ATE1] * * * …
37dilapidate — di•lap•i•date [[t]dɪˈlæp ɪˌdeɪt[/t]] v. dat•ed, dat•ing 1) to cause or allow to fall into a state of disrepair, as by misuse or neglect 2) archaic to squander 3) to decay • Etymology: 1560–70; < ML dīlapidātus, ptp. of dīlapidāre to squander… …
38lapidate — /ˈlæpədeɪt/ (say lapuhdayt) verb (t) (lapidated, lapidating) Rare 1. to pelt with stones. 2. to stone to death. {Latin lapidātus, past participle} –lapidation /læpəˈdeɪʃən/ (say lapuh dayshuhn), noun …
39κατελιθοβολεῖτο — κατά λιθοβολέω pelt with stones imperf ind mp 3rd sg (attic epic) …
40κατελιθοβολήθη — κατά λιθοβολέω pelt with stones aor ind pass 3rd sg …