Stag
91stag|gart — «STAG uhrt», noun. = staggard. (Cf. ↑staggard) …
92stag|ger|bush — «STAG uhr BUSH», noun. a shrub of the heath family with white or pink flowers, growing in the eastern United States. Its foliage is poisonous to stock, and was supposed to cause staggers in animals that ate it …
93stag|gered — «STAG uhrd», adjective. arranged in a progressing sequence as of time, or location: »12 large new plants…built on a staggered schedule (Scientific American) …
94stag|ger|y — «STAG uhr ee», adjective. staggering; inclining to stagger or fall …
95stag|head — «STAG HEHD», noun. a diseased condition of trees in which the topmost branches become dead and bare …
96stag|hound — «STAG HOWND», noun. any large hound of a breed resembling the foxhound but larger, formerly used for hunting deer and wolves …
97stag|nan|cy — «STAG nuhn see», noun. stagnant condition …
98stag|nate — «STAG nayt», verb, nat|ed, nat|ing. –v.i. to be or become stagnant. –v.t. to make stagnant. ╂[< Latin stāgnāre (with English ate1) < stāgnum standing water] …
99stag|na|tion — «stag NAY shuhn», noun. 1. the condition of becoming stagnant. 2. the act or process of making stagnant. 3. stagnant condition: »Figurative. France…is the country of Catholicism and disbelief, tradition and impiety, stagnation and drama, order… …
100Stag Harbour, Newfoundland and Labrador — Stag Harbour, with a population of approximately 250, is a community on Fogo Island, in Newfoundland, Canada.ee also* List of communities in Newfoundland and Labrador …