Sconce /(?)/
Sconce
n.
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A fortification, or work for defense; a fort.
No sconce or fortress of his raising was ever known either to have been forced, or yielded up, or quitted.
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A hut for protection and shelter; a stall.
One that . . . must raise a sconce by the highway and sell switches.
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A piece of armor for the head; headpiece; helmet.
I must get a sconce for my head.
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Fig.: The head; the skull; also, brains; sense; discretion. [Colloq.]
To knock him about the sconce with a dirty shovel.
- A poll tax; a mulct or fine.
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A protection for a light; a lantern or cased support for a candle; hence, a fixed hanging or projecting candlestick.
Tapers put into lanterns or sconces of several-colored, oiled paper, that the wind might not annoy them.
Golden sconces hang not on the walls.
- Hence, the circular tube, with a brim, in a candlestick, into which the candle is inserted.
- A squinch. (Arch.)
- A fragment of a floe of ice.
- A fixed seat or shelf. [Prov. Eng.]
Sconce
v. t.
imp. & p. p. Sconced; p. pr. & vb. n. Sconcing
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To shut up in a sconce; to imprison; to insconce. [Obs.]
Immure him, sconce him, barricade him in 't.
- To mulct; to fine. [Obs.]