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2 definitions found

From: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)

 Rood n.
 1. A representation in sculpture or in painting of the cross with Christ hanging on it.
 Note:Generally, the Trinity is represented, the Father as an elderly man fully clothed, with a nimbus around his head, and holding the cross on which the Son is represented as crucified, the Holy Spirit descending in the form of a dove near the Son's head. Figures of the Virgin Mary and of St. John are often placed near the principal figures.
 Savior, in thine image seen
 Bleeding on that precious rood.   --Wordsworth.
 2. A measure of five and a half yards in length; a rod; a perch; a pole. [Prov. Eng.]
 3. The fourth part of an acre, or forty square rods.
 By the rood, by the cross; -- a phrase formerly used in swearing. “No, by the rood, not so.” --Shak.
 Rood beam Arch., a beam across the chancel of a church, supporting the rood.
 Rood loft Arch., a loft or gallery, in a church, on which the rood and its appendages were set up to view. --Gwilt.
 Rood screen Arch., a screen, between the choir and the body of the church, over which the rood was placed. --Fairholt.
 Rood tower Arch., a tower at the intersection of the nave and transept of a church; -- when crowned with a spire it was called also rood steeple. --Weale.
 Rood tree, the cross. [Obs.] “Died upon the rood tree.” --Gower.
 

From: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)

 Stee·ple n.  Arch. A spire; also, the tower and spire taken together; the whole of a structure if the roof is of spire form. See Spire. “A weathercock on a steeple.”
 Rood steeple. See Rood tower, under Rood.
 Steeple bush Bot., a low shrub (Spiraea tomentosa) having dense panicles of minute rose-colored flowers; hardhack.
 Steeple chase, a race across country between a number of horsemen, to see which can first reach some distant object, as a church steeple; hence, a race over a prescribed course obstructed by such obstacles as one meets in riding across country, as hedges, walls, etc.
 Steeple chaser, one who rides in a steeple chase; also, a horse trained to run in a steeple chase.
 Steeple engine, a vertical back-acting steam engine having the cylinder beneath the crosshead.
 Steeple house, a church. [Obs.] --Jer. Taylor.