stanhope
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See also: Stanhope
English
[edit]Etymology 1
[edit]From Stanhope (“a surname”). Named after Captain Hon. Henry Fitzroy Stanhope, for whom it was first built.
Noun
[edit]stanhope (plural stanhopes)
- A gig, buggy or light phaeton, typically with a high seat and closed back.
- 1829, Augustus Bozzi Granville, St. Petersburgh, a journal of travels to and from that capital:
- Of late years, cabriolets, and English stanhopes, and tilburys, have been introduced into St. Petersburgh; but the real national carriage for the town is the Droshky.
Etymology 2
[edit]Named after Charles, the third Earl of Stanhope, the inventor of this magnifying glass design.
Noun
[edit]stanhope (plural stanhopes)
- A simple, one-piece microscope consisting of a cylinder of glass with each end curved outwards, one being more convex than the other
- An optical device, typically embedded in a bijou, utilising a modified Stanhope lens for viewing microphotographs embedded in the device; invented by René Dagron