mere stone
1mere-stone — Cleveland Dialect List a boundary mark or stone …
2mere-stone — In old English law, a stone for bounding or dividing lands …
3mere-stone — In old English law, a stone for bounding or dividing lands …
4mere-stone — A stone marking a boundary line or corner …
5mere — mere·ly; mere·stone; meso·mere; meta·mere; mi·cro·mere; my·e·lo·mere; my·o·mere; neph·ro·mere; neu·ro·mere; opis·tho·mere; par·a·mere; phal·lo·mere; plas·to·mere; pod·o·mere; pros·tho·mere; rhab·do·mere; sar·co·mere; scle·ro·mere; tar·so·mere;… …
6stone — al·um·stone; arrow·stone; back·stone; bake·stone; bark·stone; bird·stone; bit·stone; blood·stone; boat·stone; brum·stone; cam·stone; car·stone; cling·stone; cope·stone; coth·er·stone; cup·stone; float·stone; glad·stone; goat·stone;… …
7mere — I Adjective: Nothing more. Noun: The sea. A term of old English for boundary. See mere stone. II (French.) Mother …
8Mere Theory — Origin Adelaide, South Australia, Australia Genres Indie, rock Years active 2000–present Labels Building Boomtown Website …
9stone — adverb. Combinations such as stone cold and stone dead, in which stone is used adverbially (‘like a stone’), have been recorded for centuries. More recently, stone has developed a freer adverbial use as a mere intensive equivalent to very or… …
10Mere Old Hall — stands to the west of the village of Mere and the junction of the A566 and A50 roads in Cheshire, England. An earlier house on the site was rebuilt in the 17th century by Peter Brooke, a son of the Brookes of Norton Priory, who had bought… …