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Stop up   /stɑp əp/   Listen
Stop up

verb
1.
Fill or close tightly with or as if with a plug.  Synonyms: plug, secure.  "Stop up the leak"






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Stop up" Quotes from Famous Books



... "whatever shall we do about the rabbits? The woods are full of them, and there'll not be a sprig of green left in the garden. They can hop right over the wall, even if we do stop up ...
— The Scotch Twins • Lucy Fitch Perkins

... climates continues through a length of years unimpaired by worms or decay), so it was easy for them to make the boards join again very tolerably; besides, moss growing in great abundance all over the island, there was more than sufficient to stop up the crevices, which wooden houses must always be liable to. Repairs of this kind cost the unhappy men less trouble, as they were Russians; for all Russian peasants are known to be good carpenters—they build ...
— The History of Sandford and Merton • Thomas Day

... water, they kept turning them around until the melted fat had hardened into a thin shell exactly the size of a bullet. Then a small puncture was made through this thin casing of fat, and the interior carefully filled up with fine sand. It was not difficult then to stop up the orifice with a little fat. It was then carefully coloured like a bullet, and at a distance could hardly be distinguished from one. When put in a gun and well pounded with a ramrod, of course, it would break all to pieces, and when fired at anything like ...
— Three Boys in the Wild North Land • Egerton Ryerson Young

... thinking of something smutty! But, you joker, we're of an inventive turn of mind! There're two windows in the room, aren't there? Well, we'll knock one out and turn it into a door. Then, you understand you come in by way of the courtyard, and we can even stop up the other door, if we like. Thus you'll be in your home, and ...
— L'Assommoir • Emile Zola

... ax'd nearly all The naighbours to a randy, An' left us out o't, girt an' small, Vor all we liv'd so handy; An' zoo I zaid to Dick, "We'll trudge, When they be in their fun, min; An' car up zome'hat to the rudge, An' jis' stop up ...
— Poems of Rural Life in the Dorset Dialect • William Barnes


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