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Siege   /sidʒ/   Listen
noun
Siege  n.  
1.
A seat; especially, a royal seat; a throne. (Obs.) "Upon the very siege of justice." "A stately siege of sovereign majesty, And thereon sat a woman gorgeous gay." "In our great hall there stood a vacant chair... And Merlin called it "The siege perilous.""
2.
Hence, place or situation; seat. (Obs.) "Ah! traitorous eyes, come out of your shameless siege forever."
3.
Rank; grade; station; estimation. (Obs.) "I fetch my life and being From men of royal siege."
4.
Passage of excrements; stool; fecal matter. (Obs.) "The siege of this mooncalf."
5.
The sitting of an army around or before a fortified place for the purpose of compelling the garrison to surrender; the surrounding or investing of a place by an army, and approaching it by passages and advanced works, which cover the besiegers from the enemy's fire. See the Note under Blockade.
6.
Hence, a continued attempt to gain possession. "Love stood the siege, and would not yield his breast."
7.
The floor of a glass-furnace.
8.
A workman's bench.
Siege gun, a heavy gun for siege operations.
Siege train, artillery adapted for attacking fortified places.



verb
Siege  v. t.  To besiege; to beset. (R.) "Through all the dangers that can siege The life of man."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Siege" Quotes from Famous Books



... pressing instances of Perez, the admiral departed from the monastery of Rabida, accompanied by that ecclesiastic, and went to the camp of St Faith, where their Catholic majesties were then carrying on the siege of Granada. Perez here made such pressing instances to Isabella, that she was pleased to order a renewal of the conferences, which were still held with the prior of Prado and his former coadjutors, who were still irresolute and contradictory in their opinions. Besides ...
— A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels, Vol. III. • Robert Kerr

... general combat of the Shadows, which then made Europe quake, at every new lunge and pass of it, and which now makes Europe yawn to hear the least mention of it, there came two sputterings of actual War. Byng's sea-victory at Messina, 1718; Spanish "Siege of Gibraltar," 1727, are the main phenomena of these two Wars,—England, as its wont is, taking a shot in both, though it has now forgotten both. And, on the whole, there came, so far as I can count, Seven ...
— History Of Friedrich II. of Prussia, Volume V. (of XXI.) • Thomas Carlyle

... then only Sieur de Rosny, was passing by Blois on his way to his master; he saw him and expressed to him his "desire for a reconciliation with the King of Navarre, and to employ him on confidential service;" the difficulty was to secure to the Protestant king and his army, then engaged in the siege of Chatellerault, a passage across the Loire. Rosny undertook Henry III.'s commission. He at the same time received another from Sieur de Brigueux, governor of the little town of Beaugency, who said to him, "I see well, sir, that the king is going the right way to ruin himself ...
— A Popular History of France From The Earliest Times - Volume IV. of VI. • Francois Pierre Guillaume Guizot

... launched in 1772. It carried seventy-four guns, and fought gallantly against the Preston, was in action again at the siege of Granada, and in Chesapeake Bay. Then in 1794 the French Republic changed the vessel's name, and it joined a squadron at Brest to escort a cargo of corn coming from America. The squadron fell in with an English man-o'-war, and ...
— The World's Greatest Books, Vol VIII • Arthur Mee and J.A. Hammerton, Eds.

... conflict outside her house, on seeing a soldier lose his hand at her door, gave birth to a daughter with one hand, the other hand being a bleeding stump; he also speaks of the case of the wife of a merchant at Antwerp, who after seeing a soldier's arm shot off at the siege of Ostend gave birth to a daughter with one arm. Plot speaks of a child bearing the figure of a mouse; when pregnant, the mother had been much frightened by one of these animals. Gassendus describes a fetus with the traces of a wound in the same location as one received ...
— Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine • George M. Gould


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