stone

1. verb, pave, line or build up with stone or stones (COD); 2. adjective ‘stoned up’

1.
“He worked for Len when they were stoning the roads. We had mud roads back in that day.”

“All this road back in the twenties was stoned out of that quarry.”

“The quarry is in the Village, straight up from the garage. They stoned out of it, and then they’d move here, and they’d stone this road. And it was all done with horse and wagons.”

“I think it had been dug down to the rock, and there was no water, and they never stoned it up. They just left the cavity. This’d be in the 1950’s. I was getting the cows at night, and it was dark … And, luckily, I hit the thing straight on with the tractor, in one side and out the other. Had I been over, you know, I’m sure the tractor would have rolled over on top of me.”

2.
“I never saw a well as small and stoned up as nicely, just beautiful dry stone. And you can stand on the bottom of it, on the rock and hand a pail out the top like that, you know.”