| an extraordinary or unusual thing, person, or event; an exceptional example or instance. |
| a stew of meat, vegetables, potatoes, etc. |
stick1 (stɪk) ![]() | |
| —n | |
| 1. | a small thin branch of a tree |
| 2. | a. any long thin piece of wood |
| b. such a piece of wood having a characteristic shape for a special purpose: a walking stick; a hockey stick | |
| c. a baton, wand, staff, or rod | |
| 3. | an object or piece shaped like a stick: a stick of celery; a stick of dynamite |
| 4. | See control stick |
| 5. | informal the lever used to change gear in a motor vehicle |
| 6. | nautical a mast or yard |
| 7. | printing See composing stick |
| 8. | a. a group of bombs arranged to fall at intervals across a target |
| b. a number of paratroops jumping in sequence | |
| 9. | slang |
| a. verbal abuse, criticism: I got some stick for that blunder | |
| b. physical power, force (esp in the phrase give it some stick) | |
| 10. | (usually plural) a piece of furniture: these few sticks are all I have |
| 11. | informal (plural) a rural area considered remote or backward (esp in the phrase in the sticks) |
| 12. | informal (Canadian W coast), (Northwestern Canadian) (plural) the wooded interior part of the country |
| 13. | (plural) hockey a declaration made by the umpire if a player's stick is above the shoulders |
| 14. | (plural) goalposts |
| 15. | obsolete (US) a cannabis cigarette |
| 16. | a means of coercion |
| 17. | informal a dull boring person |
| 18. | informal ( |
| 19. | in a cleft stick in a difficult position |
| 20. | wrong end of the stick a complete misunderstanding of a situation, explanation, etc |
| —vb , sticks, sticking, sticked | |
| 21. | to support (a plant) with sticks; stake |
| [Old English sticca; related to Old Norse stikka, Old High German stecca] | |
stick2 (stɪk) ![]() | |
| —vb (when intr, | |
| 1. | (tr) to pierce or stab with or as if with something pointed |
| 2. | to thrust or push (a sharp or pointed object) or (of a sharp or pointed object) to be pushed into or through another object |
| 3. | (tr) to fasten in position by pushing or forcing a point into something: to stick a peg in a hole |
| 4. | (tr) to fasten in position by or as if by pins, nails, etc: to stick a picture on the wall |
| 5. | (tr) to transfix or impale on a pointed object |
| 6. | (tr) to cover with objects piercing or set in the surface |
| 7. | to put forward or be put forward; protrude or cause to protrude: to stick one's head out of the window |
| 8. | informal (tr) to place or put in a specified position: stick your coat on this chair |
| 9. | to fasten or be fastened by or as if by an adhesive substance: stick the pages together; they won't stick |
| 10. | informal (tr) to cause to become sticky |
| 11. | ( |
| 12. | (intr) to remain for a long time: the memory sticks in my mind |
| 13. | slang chiefly (Brit) (tr) to tolerate; abide: I can't stick that man |
| 14. | (intr) to be reluctant |
| 15. | informal (tr; usually passive) to cause to be at a loss; baffle, puzzle, or confuse: I was totally stuck for an answer |
| 16. | slang (tr) to force or impose something unpleasant on: they stuck me with the bill for lunch |
| 17. | (tr) to kill by piercing or stabbing |
| 18. | informal stick in one's throat, stick in one's craw to be difficult, or against one's conscience, for one to accept, utter, or believe |
| 19. | stick one's nose into See nose |
| 20. | informal stick to the ribs (of food) to be hearty and satisfying |
| —n | |
| 21. | the state or condition of adhering |
| 22. | informal a substance causing adhesion |
| 23. | obsolete something that causes delay or stoppage |
| [Old English stician; related to Old High German stehhan to sting, Old Norse steikja to roast on a spit] | |
stick definition
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