stick
nounThe small shoot or branch of a tree or shrub, cut off; a rod; also, a staff; as, to strike one with a stick.
stick
Any stem of a tree, of any size, cut for fuel or timber. It is applied in America to any long and slender piece of timber, round or square, from the smallest size to the largest, used in the frames of buildings; as a stick of timber for a post, a beam or a rafter.
stick
Many instruments, long and slender, are called sticks; as the composing stick of printers.
stick
A thrust with a pointed instrument that penetrates a body; a stab. Stick of eels, the number of twenty five eels. A bind contains ten sticks.
stick
verb transitive[G., to sting or prick, to stick, to adhere.]
pret. and pp. stuck.
stick
To pierce; to stab; to cause to enter, as a pointed instrument; hence, to kill by piercing; as, to stick a beast in slaughter.
stick
To thrust in; to fasten or cause to remain by piercing; as, to stick a pin on the sleeve.
stick
To fasten; to attach by causing to adhere to the surface; as, to stick on a patch or plaster; to stick on a thing with paste or glue.
stick
To set; to fix in; as, to stick card teeth.
stick
To set with something pointed; as, to stick cards.
stick
To fix on a pointed instrument; as, to stick an apple on a fork.
stick
verb intransitiveTo adhere; to hold to by cleaving to the surface, as by tenacity or attraction; as, glue sticks to the fingers; paste sticks to the wall, and causes paper to stick. I will cause the fish of thy rivers to stick to thy scales. Ezekiel 29:4.
stick
To be united; to be inseparable; to cling fast to, as something reproachful. If on your fame our sex a blot has thrown, twill ever stick, through malice of your own.
stick
To rest with the memory; to abide.
stick
To stop; to be impeded by adhesion or obstruction; as, the carriage sticks in the mire.
stick
To stop; to be arrested in a course. My faltering tongue sticks at the sound.
stick
To stop; to hesitate. He sticks at no difficulty; he sticks at the commission of no crime; he sticks at nothing.
stick
To adhere; to remain; to resist efforts to remove. I had most need of blessing, and amen stuck in my throat.
stick
To cause difficulties or scruples; to cause to hesitate. This is the difficulty that sticks with the most reasonable--\V\IAD .
stick
To be stopped or hindered from proceeding; as, a bill passed the senate, but stuck in the house of representatives. They never doubted the commons; but heard all stuck in the lords house.