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standmore about stand

stand


  5  definitions  found 
 
  From  Webster's  Revised  Unabridged  Dictionary  (1913)  [web1913]: 
 
  Stand  \Stand\,  v.  i.  (Card  Playing) 
  To  be  or  signify  that  one  is  willing  to  play  with  one's 
  hand  as  dealt. 
 
  From  Webster's  Revised  Unabridged  Dictionary  (1913)  [web1913]: 
 
  Stand  \Stand\,  v.  i.  [imp.  &  p.  p.  {Stood};  p.  pr  &  vb  n. 
  {Standing}.]  [OE.  standen;  AS  standan;  akin  to  OFries 
  stonda,  st[=a]n,  D.  staan,  OS  standan,  st[=a]n,  G.  stehen, 
  Icel.  standa,  Dan.  staae,  Sw  st[*a],  Goth.  standan,  Russ. 
  stoiate,  L.  stare,  Gr  ?  to  cause  to  stand  ?  to  stand  Skr. 
  sth[=a].  [root]163.  Cf  {Assist},  {Constant},  {Contrast}, 
  {Desist},  {Destine},  {Ecstasy},  {Exist},  {Interstice}, 
  {Obstacle},  {Obstinate},  {Prest},  n.,  {Rest}  remainder, 
  {Soltice},  {Stable},  a.  &  n.,  {State},  n.,  {Statute}, 
  {Stead},  {Steed},  {Stool},  {Stud}  of  horses,  {Substance}, 
  {System}.] 
  1.  To  be  at  rest  in  an  erect  position;  to  be  fixed  in  an 
  upright  or  firm  position;  as: 
  a  To  be  supported  on  the  feet,  in  an  erect  or  nearly 
  erect  position;  --  opposed  to  {lie},  {sit},  {kneel}, 
  etc  ``I  pray  you  all  stand  up!''  --Shak. 
  b  To  continue  upright  in  a  certain  locality,  as  a  tree 
  fixed  by  the  roots,  or  a  building  resting  on  its 
  foundation. 
 
  It  stands  as  it  were  to  the  ground  yglued. 
  --Chaucer. 
 
  The  ruined  wall  Stands  when  its  wind  worn 
  battlements  are  gone.  --Byron. 
 
  2.  To  occupy  or  hold  a  place  to  have  a  situation;  to  be 
  situated  or  located;  as  Paris  stands  on  the  Seine. 
 
  Wite  ye  not  where  there  stands  a  little  town? 
  --Chaucer. 
 
  3.  To  cease  from  progress;  not  to  proceed;  to  stop;  to  pause; 
  to  halt;  to  remain  stationary. 
 
  I  charge  thee,  stand  And  tell  thy  name  --Dryden. 
 
  The  star,  which  they  saw  in  the  east,  went  before 
  them  till  it  came  and  stood  over  where  the  young 
  child  was  --Matt.  ii  9. 
 
  4.  To  remain  without  ruin  or  injury;  to  hold  good  against 
  tendencies  to  impair  or  injure;  to  be  permanent;  to 
  endure;  to  last  hence  to  find  endurance,  strength,  or 
  resources. 
 
  My  mind  on  its  own  center  stands  unmoved.  --Dryden. 
 
  5.  To  maintain  one's  ground;  to  be  acquitted;  not  to  fail  or 
  yield;  to  be  safe. 
 
  Readers  by  whose  judgment  I  would  stand  or  fall. 
  --Spectator. 
 
  6.  To  maintain  an  invincible  or  permanent  attitude;  to  be 
  fixed,  steady,  or  firm;  to  take  a  position  in  resistance 
  or  opposition.  ``The  standing  pattern  of  their 
  imitation.''  --South. 
 
  The  king  granted  the  Jews  .  .  .  to  gather  themselves 
  together,  and  to  stand  for  their  life.  --Esther 
  viii.  11. 
 
  7.  To  adhere  to  fixed  principles;  to  maintain  moral 
  rectitude;  to  keep  from  falling  into  error  or  vice. 
 
  We  must  labor  so  as  to  stand  with  godliness, 
  according  to  his  appointment.  --Latimer. 
 
  8.  To  have  or  maintain  a  position,  order  or  rank;  to  be  in  a 
  particular  relation;  as  Christian  charity,  or  love, 
  stands  first  in  the  rank  of  gifts. 
 
  9.  To  be  in  some  particular  state;  to  have  essence  or  being 
  to  be  to  consist.  ``Sacrifices  .  .  .  which  stood  only  in 
  meats  and  drinks.''  --Heb.  ix  10. 
 
  Accomplish  what  your  signs  foreshow;  I  stand 
  resigned,  and  am  prepared  to  go  --Dryden. 
 
  Thou  seest  how  it  stands  with  me  and  that  I  may  not 
  tarry.  --Sir  W. 
  Scott. 
 
  10.  To  be  consistent;  to  agree;  to  accord. 
 
  Doubt  me  not  by  heaven,  I  will  do  nothing  But  what 
  may  stand  with  honor.  --Massinger. 
 
  11.  (Naut.)  To  hold  a  course  at  sea;  as  to  stand  from  the 
  shore;  to  stand  for  the  harbor. 
 
  From  the  same  parts  of  heaven  his  navy  stands. 
  --Dryden. 
 
  12.  To  offer  one's  self  or  to  be  offered,  as  a  candidate. 
 
  He  stood  to  be  elected  one  of  the  proctors  of  the 
  university.  --Walton. 
 
  13.  To  stagnate;  not  to  flow;  to  be  motionless. 
 
  Or  the  black  water  of  Pomptina  stands.  --Dryden. 
 
  14.  To  measure  when  erect  on  the  feet. 
 
  Six  feet  two  as  I  think,  he  stands.  --Tennyson. 
 
  15.  (Law) 
  a  To  be  or  remain  as  it  is  to  continue  in  force;  to 
  have  efficacy  or  validity;  to  abide.  --Bouvier. 
  b  To  appear  in  court.  --Burrill. 
 
  {Stand  by}  (Naut.),  a  preparatory  order  equivalent  to  {Be 
  ready}. 
 
  {To  stand  against},  to  opposite;  to  resist. 
 
  {To  stand  by}. 
  a  To  be  near  to  be  a  spectator;  to  be  present. 
  b  To  be  aside;  to  be  aside  with  disregard.  ``In  the 
  interim  [we]  let  the  commands  stand  by  neglected.'' 
  --Dr.  H.  More 
  c  To  maintain;  to  defend;  to  support;  not  to  desert; 
  as  to  stand  by  one's  principles  or  party. 
  d  To  rest  on  for  support;  to  be  supported  by 
  --Whitgift. 
 
  {To  stand  corrected},  to  be  set  right  as  after  an  error  in  a 
  statement  of  fact  --Wycherley. 
 
  {To  stand  fast},  to  be  fixed;  to  be  unshaken  or  immovable. 
 
  {To  stand  firmly  on},  to  be  satisfied  or  convinced  of 
  ``Though  Page  be  a  secure  fool,  and  stands  so  firmly  on 
  his  wife's  frailty.''  --Shak. 
 
  {To  stand  for}. 
  a  To  side  with  to  espouse  the  cause  of  to  support;  to 
  maintain,  or  to  profess  or  attempt  to  maintain;  to 
  defend.  ``I  stand  wholly  for  you.''  --Shak. 
  b  To  be  in  the  place  of  to  be  the  substitute  or  to 
  represent;  as  a  cipher  at  the  left  hand  of  a  figure 
  stands  for  nothing.  ``I  will  not  trouble  myself, 
  whether  these  names  stand  for  the  same  thing  or 
  really  include  one  another.''  --Locke. 
 
  {To  stand  in},  to  cost.  ``The  same  standeth  them  in  much  less 
  cost.''  --Robynson  (More's  Utopia). 
 
  The  Punic  wars  could  not  have  stood  the  human  race 
  in  less  than  three  millions  of  the  species.  --Burke. 
 
  {To  stand  in  hand},  to  conduce  to  one's  interest;  to  be 
  serviceable  or  advantageous. 
 
  {To  stand  off}. 
  a  To  keep  at  a  distance. 
  b  Not  to  comply. 
  c  To  keep  at  a  distance  in  friendship,  social 
  intercourse,  or  acquaintance. 
  d  To  appear  prominent;  to  have  relief.  ``Picture  is 
  best  when  it  standeth  off  as  if  it  were  carved.'' 
  --Sir  H.  Wotton. 
 
  {To  stand  off  and  on}  (Naut.),  to  remain  near  a  coast  by 
  sailing  toward  land  and  then  from  it 
 
  {To  stand  on}  (Naut.),  to  continue  on  the  same  tack  or 
  course. 
 
  {To  stand  out}. 
  a  To  project;  to  be  prominent.  ``Their  eyes  stand  out 
  with  fatness.''  --Psalm  lxxiii.  7. 
  b  To  persist  in  opposition  or  resistance;  not  to  yield 
  or  comply;  not  to  give  way  or  recede. 
 
  His  spirit  is  come  in  That  so  stood  out 
  against  the  holy  church.  --Shak. 
 
  {To  stand  to}. 
  a  To  ply;  to  urge;  to  persevere  in  using.  ``Stand  to 
  your  tackles,  mates,  and  stretch  your  oars.'' 
  --Dryden. 
  b  To  remain  fixed  in  a  purpose  or  opinion.  ``I  will 
  stand  to  it  that  this  is  his  sense.''  --Bp. 
  Stillingfleet 
  c  To  abide  by  to  adhere  to  as  to  a  contrast, 
  assertion,  promise,  etc.;  as  to  stand  to  an  award; 
  to  stand  to  one's  word 
  d  Not  to  yield;  not  to  fly;  to  maintain,  as  one's 
  ground.  ``Their  lives  and  fortunes  were  put  in 
  safety,  whether  they  stood  to  it  or  ran  away.'' 
  --Bacon. 
  e  To  be  consistent  with  to  agree  with  as  it  stands 
  to  reason  that  he  could  not  have  done  so 
  f  To  support;  to  uphold.  ``Stand  to  me  in  this  cause.'' 
  --Shak. 
 
  {To  stand  together},  to  be  consistent;  to  agree. 
 
  {To  stand  to  sea}  (Naut.),  to  direct  the  course  from  land. 
 
  {To  stand  under},  to  undergo;  to  withstand.  --Shak. 
 
  {To  stand  up}. 
  a  To  rise  from  sitting;  to  be  on  the  feet. 
  b  To  arise  in  order  to  speak  or  act  ``Against  whom 
  when  the  accusers  stood  up  they  brought  none 
  accusation  of  such  things  as  I  supposed.''  --Acts 
  xxv.  18. 
  c  To  rise  and  stand  on  end  as  the  hair. 
  d  To  put  one's  self  in  opposition;  to  contend.  ``Once 
  we  stood  up  about  the  corn.''  --Shak. 
 
  {To  stand  up  for},  to  defend;  to  justify;  to  support,  or 
  attempt  to  support;  as  to  stand  up  for  the 
  administration. 
 
  {To  stand  upon}. 
  a  To  concern;  to  interest. 
  b  To  value;  to  esteem.  ``We  highly  esteem  and  stand 
  much  upon  our  birth.''  --Ray. 
  c  To  insist  on  to  attach  much  importance  to  as  to 
  stand  upon  security;  to  stand  upon  ceremony. 
  d  To  attack;  to  assault.  [A  Hebraism]  ``So  I  stood  upon 
  him  and  slew  him.''  --2  Sam.  i.  10. 
 
  {To  stand  with},  to  be  consistent  with  ``It  stands  with 
  reason  that  they  should  be  rewarded  liberally.''  --Sir  J. 
  Davies. 
 
  From  Webster's  Revised  Unabridged  Dictionary  (1913)  [web1913]: 
 
  Stand  \Stand\,  n.  [As.  stand  See  {Stand},  v.  i.] 
  1.  The  act  of  standing. 
 
  I  took  my  stand  upon  an  eminence  .  .  .  to  look  into 
  thier  several  ladings.  --Spectator. 
 
  2.  A  halt  or  stop  for  the  purpose  of  defense,  resistance,  or 
  opposition;  as  to  come  to  or  to  make  a  stand 
 
  Vice  is  at  stand  and  at  the  highest  flow.  --Dryden. 
 
  3.  A  place  or  post  where  one  stands;  a  place  where  one  may 
  stand  while  observing  or  waiting  for  something 
 
  I  have  found  you  out  a  stand  most  fit  Where  you  may 
  have  such  vantage  on  the  duke,  He  shall  not  pass 
  you  --Shak. 
 
  4.  A  station  in  a  city  or  town  where  carriages  or  wagons 
  stand  for  hire;  as  a  cab  stand  --Dickens. 
 
  5.  A  raised  platform  or  station  where  a  race  or  other  outdoor 
  spectacle  may  be  viewed;  as  the  judge's  or  the  grand 
  stand  at  a  race  course. 
 
  6.  A  small  table;  also  something  on  or  in  which  anything  may 
  be  laid,  hung,  or  placed  upright;  as  a  hat  stand  an 
  umbrella  stand  a  music  stand 
 
  7.  A  place  where  a  witness  stands  to  testify  in  court. 
 
  8.  The  situation  of  a  shop,  store,  hotel,  etc.;  as  a  good, 
  bad  or  convenient  stand  for  business.  [U.  S.] 
 
  9.  Rank;  post  station;  standing. 
 
  Father,  since  your  fortune  did  attain  So  high  a 
  stand  I  mean  not  to  descend.  --Daniel. 
 
  10.  A  state  of  perplexity  or  embarrassment;  as  to  be  at  a 
  stand  what  to  do  --L'Estrange. 
 
  11.  A  young  tree,  usually  reserved  when  other  trees  are  cut; 
  also  a  tree  growing  or  standing  upon  its  own  root,  in 
  distinction  from  one  produced  from  a  scion  set  in  a 
  stock,  either  of  the  same  or  another  kind  of  tree. 
 
  12.  (Com.)  A  weight  of  from  two  hundred  and  fifty  to  three 
  hundred  pounds,  --  used  in  weighing  pitch. 
 
  {Microscope  stand},  the  instrument,  excepting  the  eyepiece, 
  objective,  and  other  removable  optical  parts 
 
  {Stand  of  ammunition},  the  projectile,  cartridge,  and  sabot 
  connected  together. 
 
  {Stand  of  arms}.  (Mil.)  See  under  {Arms}. 
 
  {Stand  of  colors}  (Mil.),  a  single  color,  or  flag.  --Wilhelm 
  (Mil.  Dict.) 
 
  {To  be  at  a  stand},  to  be  stationary  or  motionless;  to  be  at 
  a  standstill;  hence  to  be  perplexed;  to  be  embarrassed. 
 
 
  {To  make  a  stand},  to  halt  for  the  purpose  of  offering 
  resistance  to  a  pursuing  enemy. 
 
  Syn:  Stop;  halt;  rest;  interruption;  obstruction;  perplexity; 
  difficulty;  embarrassment;  hesitation. 
 
  From  Webster's  Revised  Unabridged  Dictionary  (1913)  [web1913]: 
 
  Stand  \Stand\,  v.  t. 
  1.  To  endure;  to  sustain;  to  bear;  as  I  can  not  stand  the 
  cold  or  the  heat. 
 
  2.  To  resist,  without  yielding  or  receding;  to  withstand. 
  ``Love  stood  the  siege.''  --Dryden. 
 
  He  stood  the  furious  foe.  --Pope. 
 
  3.  To  abide  by  to  submit  to  to  suffer. 
 
  Bid  him  disband  his  legions,  .  .  .  And  stand  the 
  judgment  of  a  Roman  senate.  --Addison. 
 
  4.  To  set  upright;  to  cause  to  stand  as  to  stand  a  book  on 
  the  shelf;  to  stand  a  man  on  his  feet. 
 
  5.  To  be  at  the  expense  of  to  pay  for  as  to  stand  a  treat. 
  [Colloq.]  --Thackeray. 
 
  {To  stand  fire},  to  receive  the  fire  of  arms  from  an  enemy 
  without  giving  way 
 
  {To  stand  one's  ground},  to  keep  the  ground  or  station  one 
  has  taken  to  maintain  one's  position.  ``Peasants  and 
  burghers,  however  brave,  are  unable  to  stand  their  ground 
  against  veteran  soldiers.''  --Macaulay. 
 
  {To  stand  trial},  to  sustain  the  trial  or  examination  of  a 
  cause  not  to  give  up  without  trial. 
 
  From  WordNet  r  1.6  [wn]: 
 
  stand 
  n  1:  a  support  or  foundation;  "the  base  of  the  lamp"  [syn:  {base}, 
  {pedestal}] 
  2:  the  position  where  a  thing  or  person  stands 
  3:  a  growth  of  similar  plants  (usually  trees)  in  a  particular 
  area;  "they  cut  down  a  stand  of  trees" 
  4:  a  small  table  for  holding  articles  of  various  kinds:  "a 
  bedside  stand" 
  5:  a  support  for  displaying  various  articles;  "the  newspapers 
  were  arranged  on  a  rack"  [syn:  {rack}] 
  6:  an  interruption  of  normal  activity  [syn:  {standstill},  {tie-up}] 
  7:  a  mental  position  from  which  things  are  viewed;  "we  should 
  consider  this  problem  from  the  viewpoint  of  the  Russians"; 
  "teaching  history  gave  him  a  special  point  of  view  toward 
  current  events"  [syn:  {point  of  view},  {viewpoint},  {standpoint}] 
  8:  a  place  where  articles  are  displayed  for  sale  [syn:  {stall}, 
  {sales  booth}] 
  9:  a  stop  made  by  a  touring  musical  or  theatrical  group  to  give 
  a  performance;  "a  one-night  stand" 
  10:  a  structure  (often  made  of  wood)  where  people  can  sit  to 
  watch  an  event  (game  or  parade)  [syn:  {stands}] 
  11:  a  platform  where  a  (brass)  band  can  play  in  the  open  air 
  [syn:  {bandstand},  {outdoor  stage}] 
  12:  a  defensive  effort;  "the  army  made  a  final  stand  at  the 
  Rhone" 
  v  1:  be  standing;  be  upright;  "We  had  to  stand  for  the  entire 
  performance!"  [syn:  {stand  up}]  [ant:  {sit},  {lie}] 
  2:  be  in  some  specified  state  or  condition;  "I  stand  corrected" 
  3:  occupy  a  place  or  location,  also  metaphorically;  "We  stand 
  on  common  ground" 
  4:  hold  one's  ground;  maintain  a  position;  be  steadfast  or 
  upright  [syn:  {remain  firm}]  [ant:  {yield}] 
  5:  put  up  with  something  or  somebody  unpleasant;  "I  cannot  bear 
  his  constant  criticism";  "The  new  secretary  had  to  endure 
  a  lot  of  unprofessional  remarks"  [syn:  {endure},  {stomach}, 
  {bear},  {tolerate},  {brook},  {abide},  {suffer},  {put  up}] 
  6:  have  or  maintain  a  position  or  stand  on  an  issue:  "Where  do 
  you  stand  on  the  War?" 
  7:  remain  inactive,  as  of  a  car  in  a  garage,  or  not  flowing,  as 
  of  water 
  8:  be  in  effect;  be  or  remain  in  force;  "The  law  stands!" 
  9:  be  tall;  have  a  height  of  copula;  "She  stands  6  feet  tall" 
  10:  put  into  an  upright  position;  "Can  you  stand  the  bookshelf 
  up?"  [syn:  {stand  up},  {place  upright}] 
  11:  withstand  the  force  of  something  "The  trees  resisted  her"; 
  "stand  the  test  of  time"  [syn:  {resist}] 
  12:  adopt  as  a  belief;  "I  subscribe  to  your  view  on  abortion" 
  [syn:  {subscribe},  {support}] 
  13:  be  available  for  stud  services,  of  male  domestic  animals 
  such  as  stallions 




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