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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Stilettos

Stiletto \Sti*let"to\, n.; pl. Stilettos. [It., dim. of stilo a dagger, fr. L. stilus a pointed instrument. See Style for writing, and cf. Stylet.]

  1. A kind of dagger with a slender, rounded, and pointed blade.

  2. A pointed instrument for making eyelet holes in embroidery.

  3. A beard trimmed into a pointed form. [Obs.]

    The very quack of fashions, the very he that Wears a stiletto on his chin.
    --Ford.

Wiktionary
stilettos

n. (plural of stiletto English)

Usage examples of "stilettos".

Screams of anguish and agony filled the air, but more from the condotierri than the drivers-for the Stilettos were striking with clubs, trying to capture men for the slave markets, but the drivers struck back with swords and lances and axes.

But I noticed that the bandits who beat us this second time were Stilettos too, and when they trade stories with their friends who attacked our caravan, they may both mention a rather large man.

The Raginaldi have loosed the Stilettos on us merchants-not that they wish to slay us, of course, only to tame us, to yoke us and make us work for them, instead of for ourselves.

But he saved the worst for last, ending by telling them about the remarks he had overheard, about a lord paying the Stilettos to discipline some unruly merchants, whereupon they erupted into a furious clamor of denunciation and calls for vengeance, countered by shouted arguments for caution.

But let us suppose that the Stilettos have learned that, and have decided to beat down the mountaineers and set an ambush here, as a way to begin their chastising of Pirogia's merchants .

Hard on that followed the realization that the big man could no longer be trusted to keep a secret, and that Gianni might not want any passing Stilettos to know his own name.

I knew at once they were most likely from that group of merchants the Stilettos ambushed two days ago.

We lost our clothes to the Stilettos when we had the bad luck to run into them.

The Stilettos didn't slacken the pace until a few men had begun to stumble and fall.

The Stilettos held the slow pace as they came out into a huge courtyard, where soldiers practiced fighting with blunted swords, and cast spears and shot arrows at targets.

The door stood open, and the Stilettos herded them through it with snarls and curses.

The half-wit who had brought down the wrath of the Stilettos had disappeared again.

They were always Stilettos, of course-they seemed to have driven all other traffic off the roads, except for the occasional farm cart.

Only twice did Stilettos catch them out on the open road without any cover, and both times, they played Giorgio and Lenni to such excellent effect that the soldiers settled for giving them a few kicks, then riding on as the "half-wit" and his "brother" fell by the wayside.

He had a brief, lurid vision of the beautiful bridges burning and falling, the elegant houses tumbling into the bright piazzas as flames burst from them while Stilettos ran from house to house, looting them of gold and plate and crystal and paintings, and smashing what they could not carry.