Strait /(?)/

Strait

a.
  1. A variant of Straight. [Obs.]

Strait

a.
  1. Narrow; not broad.
    Strait is the gate, and narrow is the way, which leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it.
    — Matt. vii. 14.
    Too strait and low our cottage doors.
  2. Tight; close; closely fitting.
  3. Close; intimate; near; familiar. [Obs.]
  4. Strict; scrupulous; rigorous.
    Some certain edicts and some strait decrees.
    The straitest sect of our religion.
    — Acts xxvi. 5 (Rev. Ver.).
  5. Difficult; distressful; straited.
    To make your strait circumstances yet straiter.
    — Secker.
  6. Parsimonious; niggargly; mean. [Obs.]
    I beg cold comfort, and you are so strait, And so ingrateful, you deny me that.

Strait

adv.
  1. Strictly; rigorously. [Obs.]

Strait

n.

pl. Straits

  1. A narrow pass or passage.
    He brought him through a darksome narrow strait To a broad gate all built of beaten gold.
    Honor travels in a strait so narrow Where one but goes abreast.
  2. A (comparatively) narrow passageway connecting two large bodies of water; -- often in the plural; as, the strait, or straits, of Gibraltar; the straits of Magellan; the strait, or straits, of Mackinaw. (Geog.)
    We steered directly through a large outlet which they call a strait, though it be fifteen miles broad.
  3. A neck of land; an isthmus. [R.]
    A dark strait of barren land.
  4. Fig.: A condition of narrowness or restriction; doubt; distress; difficulty; poverty; perplexity; -- sometimes in the plural; as, reduced to great straits.
    For I am in a strait betwixt two.
    — Phil. i. 23.
    Let no man, who owns a Providence, grow desperate under any calamity or strait whatsoever.
    Ulysses made use of the pretense of natural infirmity to conceal the straits he was in at that time in his thoughts.
    — Broome.

Strait

v. t.
  1. To put to difficulties. [Obs.]