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Stump   /stəmp/   Listen
noun
Stump  n.  
1.
The part of a tree or plant remaining in the earth after the stem or trunk is cut off; the stub.
2.
The part of a limb or other body remaining after a part is amputated or destroyed; a fixed or rooted remnant; a stub; as, the stump of a leg, a finger, a tooth, or a broom.
3.
pl. The legs; as, to stir one's stumps. (Slang)
4.
(Cricket) One of the three pointed rods stuck in the ground to form a wicket and support the bails.
5.
A short, thick roll of leather or paper, cut to a point, or any similar implement, used to rub down the lines of a crayon or pencil drawing, in shading it, or for shading drawings by producing tints and gradations from crayon, etc., in powder.
6.
A pin in a tumbler lock which forms an obstruction to throwing the bolt, except when the gates of the tumblers are properly arranged, as by the key; a fence; also, a pin or projection in a lock to form a guide for a movable piece.
Leg stump (Cricket), the stump nearest to the batsman.
Off stump (Cricket), the stump farthest from the batsman.
Stump tracery (Arch.), a term used to describe late German Gothic tracery, in which the molded bar seems to pass through itself in its convolutions, and is then cut off short, so that a section of the molding is seen at the end of each similar stump.
To go on the stump, or To take the stump, to engage in making public addresses for electioneering purposes; a phrase derived from the practice of using a stump for a speaker's platform in newly-settled districts. Hence also the phrases stump orator, stump speaker, stump speech, stump oratory, etc. (Colloq. U.S.) on the stump campaigning for public office; running for election to office.



verb
Stump  v. t.  (past & past part. stumped; pres. part. stumping)  
1.
To cut off a part of; to reduce to a stump; to lop. "Around the stumped top soft moss did grow."
2.
To strike, as the toes, against a stone or something fixed; to stub. (Colloq.)
3.
To challenge; also, to nonplus. (Colloq.)
4.
To travel over, delivering speeches for electioneering purposes; as, to stump a State, or a district. See To go on the stump, under Stump, n. (Colloq. U.S.)
5.
(Cricket)
(a)
To put (a batsman) out of play by knocking off the bail, or knocking down the stumps of the wicket he is defending while he is off his allotted ground; sometimes with out.
(b)
To bowl down the stumps of, as, of a wicket. "A herd of boys with clamor bowled, And stumped the wicket."
To stump it.
(a)
To go afoot; hence, to run away; to escape. (Slang)
(b)
To make electioneering speeches. (Colloq. U.S.)



Stump  v. i.  To walk clumsily, as if on stumps.
To stump up, to pay cash. (Prov. Eng.)






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Stump" Quotes from Famous Books



... track was a huge stump of a sycamore tree, and Stella elected to sit down beside it and wait until they returned, as she was pretty tired. The boys passed on with the warning to fire her revolver three times if anything ...
— Ted Strong in Montana - With Lariat and Spur • Edward C. Taylor

... of an erect stump of a hollow tree 15 inches in diameter, the ribbed bark of which showed that it was a Sigillaria, and which belonged to the same forest as the specimen examined by us in 1852, Dr. Dawson obtained not only fifty specimens of Pupa vetusta (Figure 442), and nine skeletons of reptiles ...
— The Student's Elements of Geology • Sir Charles Lyell

... out, old man," interrupted Arkwright. "No stump speeches here. They don't go. They bore people and create an impression that you're both ridiculous ...
— The Fashionable Adventures of Joshua Craig • David Graham Phillips

... rocks surrounding them. 'Good line for a comedy, I think. Ha! ha!—gad, I'll make a note of it,' and diving into one of the pockets of his coat, he produced therefrom an old letter, on the back of which he inscribed the witticism with the stump of ...
— Madame Midas • Fergus Hume

... rather hinted his praise and censure indirectly and very laconically. One was now compelled to think over the matter, and soon came to a far deeper insight. Tims, for instance, I had very carefully executed, after a pattern, a nosegay on blue paper, with white and black crayon, and partly with the stump, partly by hatching it up, had tried to give effect to the little picture. After I had been long laboring in this way, he once came behind me, and said, "More paper!" upon which he immediately withdrew. My neighbor and I puzzled our heads as to what this ...
— Autobiography • Johann Wolfgang von Goethe


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