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stalk
1[stawk]
noun
the stem or main axis of a plant.
any slender supporting or connecting part of a plant, as the petiole of a leaf, the peduncle of a flower, or the funicle of an ovule.
a similar structural part of an animal.
a stem, shaft, or slender supporting part of anything.
Automotive., a slender lever, usually mounted on or near the steering wheel, that is used by the driver to control a signal or function.
The horn button is on the turn-signal stalk.
stalk
2[stawk]
verb (used without object)
to pursue or approach prey, quarry, etc., stealthily.
to walk with measured, stiff, or haughty strides.
He was so angry he stalked away without saying goodbye.
to proceed in a steady, deliberate, or sinister manner.
Famine stalked through the nation.
Obsolete., to walk or go stealthily along.
verb (used with object)
to pursue (game, a person, etc.) stealthily.
to proceed through (an area) in search of prey or quarry.
to stalk the woods for game.
to proceed or spread through in a steady or sinister manner.
Disease stalked the land.
noun
an act or course of stalking quarry, prey, or the like.
We shot the mountain goat after a five-hour stalk.
a slow, stiff stride or gait.
stalk
1/ stɔːk /
noun
the main stem of a herbaceous plant
any of various subsidiary plant stems, such as a leafstalk (petiole) or flower stalk (peduncle)
a slender supporting structure in animals such as crinoids and certain protozoans, coelenterates, and barnacles
any long slender supporting shaft or column
stalk
2/ stɔːk /
verb
to follow or approach (game, prey, etc) stealthily and quietly
to pursue persistently and, sometimes, attack (a person with whom one is obsessed, often a celebrity)
to spread over (a place) in a menacing or grim manner
fever stalked the camp
(intr) to walk in a haughty, stiff, or threatening way
he stalked out in disgust
to search or draw (a piece of land) for prey
noun
the act of stalking
a stiff or threatening stride
stalk
The main stem of a plant.
A slender structure that supports a plant part, such as a flower or leaf.
A slender supporting structure in certain other organisms, such as the reproductive structure in plasmodial slime molds or the part of a mushroom below the cap.
A slender supporting or connecting part of an animal, such as the eyestalk of a lobster.
Other Word Forms
- stalklike adjective
- stalkless adjective
- stalked adjective
- stalker noun
- stalkable adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of stalk1
Word History and Origins
Origin of stalk1
Origin of stalk2
Example Sentences
The 26-year-old, who was arrested in December, faces the charges of murder and stalking.
Crimes which disproportionately affect women, including harassment, stalking and controlling behaviour, comprise 37.9% of unrecorded violent crime and must be better recorded, the report found.
Cheetah cubs stay hidden for two months and only join hunts at about a year old to learn stalking and killing skills.
He said King had hunted and stalked police during the incident - a witness used the word "tracking".
There was Kershaw, deftly making plays from the mound, demonstrably pleading for every close strike call, proudly stalking from the mound into a dugout filled with hugs and high-fives.
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