verb, stopped or (Archaic
) stopt; stop⋅ping; noun | 1. | to cease from, leave off, or discontinue: to stop running. |
| 2. | to cause to cease; put an end to: to stop noise in the street. |
| 3. | to interrupt, arrest, or check (a course, proceeding, process, etc.): Stop your work just a minute. |
| 4. | to cut off, intercept, or withhold: to stop supplies. |
| 5. | to restrain, hinder, or prevent (usually fol. by from): I couldn't stop him from going. |
| 6. | to prevent from proceeding, acting, operating, continuing, etc.: to stop a speaker; to stop a car. |
| 7. | to block, obstruct, or close (a passageway, channel, opening, duct, etc.) (usually fol. by up): He stopped up the sink with a paper towel. He stopped the hole in the tire with a patch. |
| 8. | to fill the hole or holes in (a wall, a decayed tooth, etc.). |
| 9. | to close (a container, tube, etc.) with a cork, plug, bung, or the like. |
| 10. | to close the external orifice of (the ears, nose, mouth, etc.). |
| 11. | Sports.
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| 12. | Banking. to notify a bank to refuse payment of (a check) upon presentation. |
| 13. | Bridge. to have an honor card and a sufficient number of protecting cards to keep an opponent from continuing to win in (a suit). |
| 14. | Music.
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| 15. | to come to a stand, as in a course or journey; halt. |
| 16. | to cease moving, proceeding, speaking, acting, operating, etc.; to pause; desist. |
| 17. | to cease; come to an end. |
| 18. | to halt for a brief visit (often fol. by at, in, or by): He is stopping at the best hotel in town. |
| 19. | stop by, to make a brief visit on one's way elsewhere: I'll stop by on my way home. |
| 20. | the act of stopping. |
| 21. | a cessation or arrest of movement, action, operation, etc.; end: The noise came to a stop. Put a stop to that behavior! |
| 22. | a stay or sojourn made at a place, as in the course of a journey: Above all, he enjoyed his stop in Trieste. |
| 23. | a place where trains or other vehicles halt to take on and discharge passengers: Is this a bus stop? |
| 24. | a closing or filling up, as of a hole. |
| 25. | a blocking or obstructing, as of a passage or channel. |
| 26. | a plug or other stopper for an opening. |
| 27. | an obstacle, impediment, or hindrance. |
| 28. | any piece or device that serves to check or control movement or action in a mechanism. |
| 29. | Architecture. a feature terminating a molding or chamfer. |
| 30. | Commerce.
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| 31. | Music.
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| 32. | Sports. an individual defensive play or act that prevents an opponent or opposing team from scoring, advancing, or gaining an advantage, as a catch in baseball, a tackle in football, or the deflection of a shot in hockey. |
| 33. | Nautical. a piece of small line used to lash or fasten something, as a furled sail. |
| 34. | Phonetics.
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| 35. | Photography. the diaphragm opening of a lens, esp. as indicated by an f- number. |
| 36. | Building Trades.
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| 37. | any of various marks used as punctuation at the end of a sentence, esp. a period. |
| 38. | the word “stop” printed in the body of a telegram or cablegram to indicate a period. |
| 39. | stops, (used with a singular verb ) a family of card games whose object is to play all of one's cards in a predetermined sequence before one's opponents. |
| 40. | Zoology. a depression in the face of certain animals, esp. dogs, marking the division between the forehead and the projecting part of the muzzle. |
| 41. | stop down, Photography. (on a camera) to reduce (the diaphragm opening of a lens). |
| 42. | stop in, to make a brief, incidental visit: If you're in town, be sure to stop in. |
| 43. | stop off, to halt for a brief stay at some point on the way elsewhere: On the way to Rome we stopped off at Florence. |
| 44. | stop out,
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| 45. | stop over, to stop briefly in the course of a journey: Many motorists were forced to stop over in that town because of floods. |
| 46. | pull out all the stops,
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stop by
Also, stop in. Pay a brief visit, as in I hope you'll stop by this afternoon, or He stopped in at Martha's whenever he came to New York on business. The first term dates from about 1900, the variant from the mid-1800s.