Seat , v. i. To rest; to lie down. [Obs.]
Spenser.
Seat , v. t. [imp. & p. p. Seated;
p. pr. & vb. n.
Seating.]
1. To place on a seat; to cause to sit
down; as, to
seat one's self.
The guests were no sooner seated but they entered into a warm debate.
Arbuthnot.
2. To cause to occupy a post, site, situation, or the like; to station; to establish; to fix; to settle.
Thus high . . . is King Richard
seated.
Shak. They had seated themselves in New Guiana.
Sir W. Raleigh. 3. To assign a seat to, or the seats of; to
give a sitting to; as, to seat a church, or persons in a church.
4. To fix; to set firm.
From their
foundations, loosening to and fro,
They plucked the seated
hills.
Milton. 5. To settle; to
plant with inhabitants; as to seat a country. [Obs.] W. Stith.
6. To put a seat or bottom in; as,
to seat a chair.
Seat (sēt),
n. [OE. sete, Icel. sæti; akin to Sw. säte, Dan. sæde,
MHG. sāze, AS. set, setl, and E. sit. √154. See Sit, and cf. Settle, n.]
1. The place or
thing upon which one sits; hence; anything made to be sat in or upon, as a chair, bench, stool, saddle, or the like.
And
Jesus . . . overthrew the
tables of the money changers, and the seats of them that sold doves.
Matt.
xxi. 12. 2. The place occupied by anything, or where any person or thing is situated, resides, or abides; a site; an abode, a station; a post; a situation.
Where thou dwellest, even where Satan's seat is.
Rev.
ii. 13. He that builds a fair house upon an ill
seat committeth himself to prison.
Bacon. A
seat of plenty, content, and tranquillity.
Macaulay.
3. That part of a thing on which a person sits; as, the seat of a chair or saddle; the seat of a pair of pantaloons.
4. A sitting; a right to sit;
regular or appropriate place of sitting; as, a seat
in a church;
a seat for the season in the
opera house.
5. Posture, or way of sitting, on horseback.
She had so good a seat and hand she might be trusted with any mount.
G.
Eliot. 6. (Mach.) A part or surface on which another part or surface rests; as, a valve seat.
Seat worm (Zoöl.), the pinworm.