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Noah Webster's 1828 American Dictionary
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1828 Definition

STORE, n.

1. A large number; as a store of years.

2. A large quantity; great plenty; abundance; as a store of wheat or provisions.

3. A stock provided; a large quantity for supply; ample abundance. The troops have great stores of provisions and ammunition. The ships have stores for a long voyage. [This the present usual acceptation of the word, and in this sense the plural, stores, is commonly used. When applied to a single article of supply, it is still sometimes used in the singular; as a good store of wine or of bread.]

4. Quantity accumulated; fund; abundance; as stores of knowledge.

5. A storehouse; a magazine; a warehouse. Nothing can be more convenient than the stores on Central wharf in Boston.

6. In the United States, shops for the sale of goods of any kind, by wholesale or retail, are often called stores.

In store, in a state of accumulation, in a literal sense; hence, in a state of preparation for supply; in a state of readiness. Happiness is laid up in store for the righteous; misery is in store for the wicked.

STORE, a. Hoarded; laid up; as store treasure. [Not in use.]

STORE, v.t.

1. To furnish; to supply; to replenish.

Wise Plato said the world with men was stord.

Her mind with thousand virtues stord.

2. To stock against a future time; as a garrison well stored with provisions.

One having stored a pond of four acres with carp, tench and other fish--

3. To reposit in a store or warehouse for preservation; to warehouse; as, to store goods.
1913 Definition
Store (store)
n.(?)
Store
[OE. stor, stoor, OF. estor, provisions, supplies, fr. estorer to store. See Store, v. t.]
  1. That which is accumulated, or massed together; a source from which supplies may be drawn; hence, an abundance; a great quantity, or a great number.

    The ships are fraught with store of victuals. Bacon.

    With store of ladies, whose bright eyes
    Rain influence, and give the prize.
    Milton.

  2. A place of deposit for goods, esp. for large quantities; a storehouse; a warehouse; a magazine.
  3. Any place where goods are sold, whether by wholesale or retail; a shop.
    [U.S. *** British Colonies]
  4. Articles, especially of food, accumulated for some specific object] supplies, as of provisions, arms, ammunition, and the like; as, the stores of an army, of a ship, of a family.

    His swine, his horse, his stoor, and his poultry. Chaucer.

    In store, in a state of accumulation; in keeping; hence, in a state of readiness. "I have better news in store for thee." Shak. -- Store clothes, clothing purchased at a shop or store; -- in distinction from that which is home-made. [Colloq. U.S.] -- Store pay, payment for goods or work in articles from a shop or store, instead of money. [U.S.] -- To set store by, to value greatly; to have a high appreciation of. -- To tell no store of, to make no account of; to consider of no importance.

    Syn. -- Fund; supply; abundance; plenty; accumulation; provision. -- Store, Shop. The English call the place where goods are sold (however large or splendid it may be) a shop, and confine the word store to its original meaning; viz., a warehouse, or place where goods are stored. In America the word store is applied to all places, except the smallest, where goods are sold. In some British colonies the word store is used as in the United States.

    In his needy shop a tortoise hung,
    An alligator stuffed, and other skins
    Of ill-shaped fishes; and about his shelves
    A beggarly account of empty boxes.
    Shak.

    Sulphurous and nitrous foam, . . .
    Concocted and adjusted, they reduced
    To blackest grain, and into store conveyed.
    Milton.

  5. Accumulated; hoarded.
    Bacon.
  6. To collect as a reserved supply; to accumulate; to lay away.

    Dora stored what little she could save. Tennyson.

  7. To furnish; to supply; to replenish; esp., to stock or furnish against a future time.

    Her mind with thousand virtues stored. Prior.

    Wise Plato said the world with men was stored. Denham.

    Having stored a pond of four acres with carps, tench, and other fish. Sir M. Hale.

  8. To deposit in a store, warehouse, or other building, for preservation; to warehouse; as, to store goods.

1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
Any system of education, therefore, which limits instruction to the arts and sciences, and rejects the aids of religion in forming the characters of citizens, is essentially defective.…
 Letter to David McClure :: October 25, 1836 




A plant patent covers asexually reproducible plants (that is, through the use of grafts and cuttings), such as flowers. Sexually reproducible plants (that is, those that use pollination), can be monopolized under the Plant Protection Act. Both sexually and asexually reproducible plants can now also be monopolized by utility patent. Plant patents are comparatively recent innovations, the first one being granted in 1930. A plant patent is granted by the Government to an inventor (or the inventor's heirs or assigns) who has invented or discovered and asexually reproduced a distinct and new variety of plant, other than a tuber propagated plant or a plant found in an uncultivated state. The grant, which lasts for 20 years from the date of filing the application, protects the inventor's right to exclude others from asexually reproducing, selling, or using the plant so reproduced. This protection is limited to a plant in its ordinary meaning: (1) A living plant organism which expresses a set of characteristics determined by its single, genetic makeup or genotype, which can be duplicated through asexual reproduction, but which can not otherwise be "made" or "manufactured." (2) Sports, mutants, hybrids, and transformed plants are comprehended; sports or mutants may be spontaneous or induced. Hybrids may be natural, from a planned breeding program, or somatic in source. While natural plant mutants might have naturally occurred, they must have been discovered in a cultivated area. (3) Algae and macro fungi are regarded as plants, but bacteria are not. A utility patent would be filed for claims to plants, seeds, genes, etc. According to the USPTO, there were 959 plant patent applications filed in 2009.




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