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  1. The meaning of STICK is a woody piece or part of a tree or shrub. How to use stick in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Stick.

  2. any of four equal parts in a pound of butter or margarine. Sports. an implement used to drive or propel a ball or puck, as a crosse or a hockey stick. Aeronautics. a lever, usually with a handle, by which the longitudinal and lateral motions of an airplane are controlled. Nautical. a mast or spar.

  3. STICK definition: 1. a thin piece of wood or other material: 2. a long, thin wooden pole that especially old or…. Learn more.

  4. A stick is a long thin piece of wood which is used for supporting someone's weight or for hitting people or animals. He looks old and walks with a stick. Crowds armed with sticks and stones took to the streets. Synonyms: cane, staff, pole, rod More Synonyms of stick. 3. See also carrot and stick. 4. countable noun [usually noun NOUN] B1+.

  5. A stick is either a short length of woodpart of a tree branch—or an implement made of wood, like a hockey stick, a walking stick, or the sticks you use to play a drum.

  6. [transitive, intransitive] to push something, usually a sharp object, into something; to be pushed into something. stick something + adv./prep. The nurse stuck the needle into my arm. Don't stick your fingers through the bars of the cage. + adv./prep. I found a nail sticking in the tyre. Extra Examples. Oxford Collocations Dictionary. put.

  7. Define stick. stick synonyms, stick pronunciation, stick translation, English dictionary definition of stick. n. 1. A long slender piece of wood, especially: a. A branch or stem that has fallen or been cut from a tree or shrub. b. A piece of wood, such as a tree...

  8. to become joined to something or to make something become joined to something else, usually with a substance like glue: Anne stuck a picture of her boyfriend on the wall. The stamp wouldn't stick to the envelope. Fewer examples. The preparation helps the paint to stick to the surface. The cake had stuck to the sides of the tin.

  9. Stick, a more colloquial and general term, is used particularly when a third kind of material is involved: A gummed label will stick to a package.

  10. The baby stuck his legs in the air. Don’t stick your tongue out. It’s rude! 5 difficult to move [ intransitive] if something sticks, it becomes fixed in one position and is difficult to move This door keeps sticking.

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