See also: Freestone and free-stone

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free +‎ stone

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freestone (countable and uncountable, plural freestones)

  1. Sedimentary rock: a type of stone that is composed of small particles and easily shaped, most commonly sandstone or limestone.
    • 1749, Henry Fielding, The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling:
      Mr Allworthy [] died immensely rich and built an hospital [] but had he done nothing more I should have left him to have recorded his own merit on some fair freestone over the door of that hospital.
    • 1853, John Ruskin, “IV, St. Mark's”, in The Stones of Venice, volume II (The Sea-Stories), London: Smith, Elder, and Co., [], →OCLC, § XXVII, page 77:
      It might, under all the circumstances above stated, have been a question with other builders, whether to import one shipload of costly jaspers, or twenty of chalk flints; and whether to build a small church faced with porphyry and paved with agate, or to raise a vast cathedral in freestone.
  2. (countable) A stone fruit having a stone (pit) that is relatively free of the flesh.

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