Stock Definition–noun | 1. | a supply of goods kept on hand for sale to customers by a merchant, distributor, manufacturer, etc.; inventory. | | 2. | a quantity of something accumulated, as for future use: a stock of provisions. | | 4. | Theater. a stock company: a job in summer stock. | | 5. | Finance. | a. | the outstanding capital of a company or corporation. | | b. | the shares of a particular company or corporation. | | c. | the certificate of ownership of such stock; stock certificate. | | d. | (formerly) a tally or stick used in transactions between a debtor and a creditor. | | | 6. | Horticulture. | a. | Also called understock. in grafting, a stem in which the bud or scion is inserted. | | b. | a stem, tree,
3e8
or plant that furnishes slips or cuttings; stock plant. | | | 7. | the trunk or main stem of a tree or other plant, as distinguished from roots and branches. | | 8. | the type from which a group of animals or plants has been derived. | | 9. | a race or other related group of animals or plants. | | 10. | the person from whom a given line of descent is derived; the original progenitor. | | 11. | a line of descent; a tribe, race, or ethnic group. | | 12. | Linguistics. a category
1da
consisting of language families that, because of resemblances in grammatical structure and vocabulary, are considered likely to be related by common origin. Compare family (def. 14), phylum (def. 2)
d08
span>. | | 13. | any grouping of related languages. | | 14. | the handle of a whip, fishing rod, etc. | | 15. | Firearms. | a. | the wooden or metal piece to which the barrel and mechanism of a rifle are attached. | | b. | a part of an automatic weapon, as a machine gun, similar in position or function. | | | 16. | the trunk or stump of a tree, left standing. | | 17. | a dull or stupid person. | | 18. | something lifeless or senseless. | | 19. | the main upright part of anything, esp. a supporting structure. | | 20. | stocks, | a. | a former instrument of punishment consisting of a framework with holes for securing the ankles and, sometimes, the wrists, used to expose an offender to public derision. Compare pillory (def. 1). | | b. | a frame in which a horse or other animal is secured in a standing position for shoeing or for a veterinary operation. | | c. | the frame on which a boat rests while under construction. | | | 21. | Nautical. | a. | a vertical shaft forming part of a rudder and controlling the rudder's movement. | | b. | a transverse piece of wood or metal near the ring on some anchors. | | | 22. | the metal or wooden body of a carpenter's plane. | | 23. | Metallurgy. | a. | material being smelted in a blast furnace. | | b. | a metal piece to be forged. | | | 24. | Printing. |
1056
a. | a specified quality or kind of paper: glossy stock; card stock; offset stock. | | b. | the paper for printing a particular job: We don't have enough stock for that large a run. | | | 25. | the raw material from which something is made. | | 26. | Papermaking. stuff (def. 15). | | 27. | Cookery. the liquor or broth prepared by boiling meat, fish, chicken, etc., with or without vegetables or seasonings, and used esp. as a foundation for soups and sauces. | | 28. | any of several plants belonging to the genus Matthiola, of the mustard family, esp. M. incana, having fragrant white, blue, purple, reddish, or yellowish flowers. | | 29. | a rhizome or rootstock. | | 30. | Zoology. a compound organism, as a colony of corals. | | 31. | a collar or a neckcloth fitting like a band around the neck. | | 32. | Cards. the portion of a pack of cards that, in certain games, is not dealt out to the players, but is left on the table, to be drawn from as occasion requires. | | 33. | an adjustable wrench for holding dies for cutting screws. | | 37. | Roman Catholic Church. one of a set of three metal containers for holy oil. | | 38. | Geology, Mining. an irregular igneous intrusion, usually an offshoot of a batholith, often mineralized. | | 40. | Obsolete. the frame of a plow to which the share, handles, etc., are attached. | –
1d3
adjective | 41. | kept regularly on hand, as for use or sale; staple; standard: stock articles. | | 42. | having as one's job the care of a concern's goods: a stock clerk. | | 43. | of the co
215
mmon or ordinary type; in common use: a stock argument. | | 44. | banal; commonplace: a stock remark. | | 45. | pertaining to or designating the breeding and raising of livestock: stock farming. | | 46. | Southern U.S. (chiefly Southern Appalachian and South Atlantic States ). (of farm animals) being a fully grown male: a stock hog. | | 47. | of or pertaining to the stock of a company or corporation: a stock report. | | 48. | Theater. | a. | pertaining to a stock company. | | b. | appearing together in a repertoire, as a company. | | c. | forming part of a repertoire, as a play. | | d. | being a character type fixed by convention, as in the commedia dell'-arte, a harlequinade, minstrel show, or the like. | | | 49. | Informal. of, pertaining to, or characteristic of a stock car. | –verb (used with object) | 50. | to furnish with a stock or supply. | | 51. | to furnish with stock, as a farm with horses, cattle, etc. | | 52. | to lay up in store, as for future use. | | 53. | to fasten to or provide with a stock, as a rifle, plow, bell, anchor, etc. | | 54. | to put in the stocks as a punishment. | –verb (used without object) | 55. | to lay in a stock of something (often fol. by up). | —Idioms | 56. | in stock, on hand for use or sale: There are no more blue skirts in stock. | | 57. | lock, stock, and barrel. lock 1
115a
(def. 29). | | 58. | on the stocks, | a. | under construction, as esp. a ship. | | b. | in progress or preparation: a new novel on the stocks. | | | 59. | out of stock, lacking a supply of, esp. temporarily: We are out of stock in this item. | | 60. | take or put stock in, to put confidence in or attach importance to; believe; trust: Considering his general unreliability, I can't take stock in what he has told you. | | 61. | take stock, | a. | to make an inventory of stock on hand. | | b. | to make an appraisal of resources or prospects: She took stock of her decorating scheme and decided it was time for a change. | | | From Dictionary
Quote Definition–verb (used with object) | 1. | to repeat (a passage, phrase, etc.) from a book, speech, or the like, as by way of authority, illustration, etc. | | 2. | to repeat words from (a book, author, etc.). | | 3. | to use a brief excerpt from: The composer quotes Beethoven's Fifth in his latest work. | | 4. | to cite, offer, or bring forward as evidence or support. | | 5. | to enclose (words) within quotation marks. | | 6. | Commerce. | b. | to state the current price of. | | –verb (used without object) | 7. | to make a quotation or quotations, as from a book or author. | | 8. | (used by a speaker to indicate the beginning of a quotation.) | –noun —Idiom | 11. | quote unquote, so called; so to speak; as it were: If you're a liberal, quote unquote, they're suspicious of you. | | From Dictionary
Related topics from BritannicaAOL one of the largest Internet access subscription service companies in the United States, providing a range of Web services for users. AOL was one of the first companies to establish a strong sense of ...
Business and Industry Review AT&T surprised the telecommunications industry in 1995 when it announced that it would voluntarily split itself into three publicly held companies. Occurring just 11 years after the breakup of the ...
Economic Affairs With interest rates at 40-year lows, the Canadian stock exchanges did a booming business in 1996. In the third quarter the Canadian economy had its best spurt of growth in more than two years. GDP ...
Economic Affairs The stock market had a record-breaking year in 1995 as the bull market continued its longest and strongest performance on record. By year-end the upward move in the S&P 500 index was in its 62nd ...
China In 2006 the Chinese economy was setting records at every turn. Tax revenue climbed to $385 billion; the trade surplus tripled and broke $100 billion; domestic tourism hit 1.2 billion trips; and ...
Economic Affairs The longest bull market in history, with market indexes achieving unprecedented gains and trading volumes since it began in 1991, came to an end after peaking in March 2000. By the end of the year, ...
Computers and Information Systems The growing impatience on Wall Street with profitless e-commerce firms led some Web-based companies to change their strategies. The most successful raised their prices or sought useful alliances. The ...
Publishing The year 1993 was the year that secured the future of The Observer newspaper; founded in London in 1791, it was the world's oldest Sunday newspaper, but it had been reporting heavy losses and ...
Horace Horace was probably of the Sabellian hillman stock of Italy's central highlands. His father had once been a slave but gained freedom before Horace's birth and became an auctioneer's assistant. He ...
|
Related topics from Technorati |
|
|
|