stave off
To prevent something from happening; to obviate or avert.
He drank plenty of orange juice, hoping to stave off the cold making the rounds at the office.
noun
One of a number of narrow strips of wood, or narrow iron plates, placed edge to edge to form the sides, covering, or lining of a vessel or structure; especially, one of the strips which form the sides of a cask, barrel, pail, etc.
For the Cherubims ſpread foorth their wings ouer the place of the Arke, and the Cherubims couered the Arke and the ſtaues thereof, aboue.
One of the bars or rounds of a rack, rungs of a ladder, etc; one of the cylindrical bars of a lantern wheel
A metrical portion; a stanza; a staff.
Let us chaunt a passing stave / In honour of that hero brave.
The set of five horizontal and parallel lines on and between which musical notes are written or pointed; the staff.
The initial consonant, consonant cluster, or vowel of a word which rhymes with another word with the same consonant or vowel in stave-rhyme.
Ley, in his work on the Metrical Forms of Hebrew Poetry, 1866, has taken too little notice of these frequently occurring alliteration staves; Lagarde communicated to me (8th Sept. 1846) his view of the stave-rhyme in the Book[…]
[The] stave that binds the two halves of the line together the on-verse must be classified as D in spite of the f-stave . . stave-rhyme (OED s.v. Stave sb.)
verb
To fit or furnish with staves or rundles.
vpon paine of death to bring it out and to ſtaue it
To break in the staves of; to break a hole in; to burst.
to stave in a cask
A great Sea constant runs here upon the Rocks, and before they got to Land their Boat was stav’d in Pieces […]
To push, or keep off, as with a staff.
The condition of a servant staves him off to a distance.
To delay by force or craft; to drive away.
We ate grass in an attempt to stave off our hunger.
Congress had authorized seeds to be granted to the farmers there to stave hunger, but President Cleveland vetoed the bill.
To burst in pieces by striking against something.
But Donald would not hear of that proposal at all, assuring the Prince that it was impossible for them to return to the land again, because the squall was against them, and that if they should steer for the rock the boat would undoubtedly stave to pieces and all of them behoved to be drowned, for there was no [fol. 284.] possibility of saving any one life amongst them upon such a dangerous rock, where the sea was dashing with the utmost violence.
name
A surname.