stem

pronunciation

How to pronounce stem in British English: UK [stem]word uk audio image

How to pronounce stem in American English: US [stem] word us audio image

  • Noun:
    (linguistics) the form of a word after all affixes are removed
    a slender or elongated structure that supports a plant or fungus or a plant part or plant organ
    cylinder forming a long narrow part of something
    the tube of a tobacco pipe
    front part of a vessel or aircraft
    a turn made in skiing; the back of one ski is forced outward and the other ski is brought parallel to it
  • Verb:
    grow out of, have roots in, originate in
    cause to point inward
    stop the flow of a liquid
    remove the stem from

Word Origin

stem
stem: The stem [OE] of a tree is etymologically the upright part, the part that ‘stands’ up. The word comes from prehistoric Germanic *stamniz, a derivative of the base *sta- ‘stand’ (which also produced English stand). The application to the ‘front of a vessel’ (as in from stem to stern) comes from the notion of an ‘upright beam’ at the prow (and originally the stern also) of a boat, which dates back to the Anglo-Saxon period. Stem ‘stop’ [13] was borrowed from Old Norse stemma, a descendant of prehistoric Germanic *stamjan.This was formed from the base *stam- ‘stop, check’, which also produced English stammer and stumble.=> stand, statue; stammer, stumble
stem (n.)
Old English stemn, stefn "stem of a plant, trunk of a tree," also "either end-post of a ship," from Proto-Germanic *stamniz (cognates: Old Saxon stamm, Old Norse stafn "stem of a ship;" Danish stamme, Swedish stam "trunk of a tree;" Old High German stam, German Stamm), from suffixed form of PIE root *sta- "to stand" (see stet). Meaning "support of a wineglass" is from 1835. Meaning "unchanging part of a word" is from 1830. Stems slang for "legs" is from 1860. The nautical sense is preserved in the phrase stem to stern "along the full length" (of a ship), attested from 1620s. Stem cell attested by 1885.
stem (v.1)
"to hold back," early 14c., from a Scandinavian source, such as Old Norse stemma "to stop, dam up; be stopped, abate," from Proto-Germanic *stamjan (cognates: Swedish stämma, Old Saxon stemmian, Middle Dutch stemon, German stemmen "stop, resist, oppose"), from PIE root *stem- "to strike against something" (cognates: Lithuanian stumiu "thrust, push"). Not connected to stem (n.). Related: Stemmed; stemming. Phrase to stem the tide is literally "to hold back the tide," but often is confused with stem (v.2) "make headway against." Verbal phrase stems from (1932, American English), perhaps is from stem (v.) in the sense "to rise, mount up, have origin in" (1570s), or is influenced by or translates German stammen aus, probably from a figurative sense represented by English stem (n.) in the sense of "stock of a family, line of descent" (c. 1540; cognates: family tree, and German stammvater "tribal ancestor," literally "stem-father").
stem (v.2)
"make headway by sailing, head in a certain course," late 14c., literally "to push the stem through," from stem (n.) in the "ship post" sense (here the post at the prow of the ship). Related: Stemmed; stemming.

Example

1. The company has begun to stem its loss of customers , says walden .
2. And they will make the new parts with stem cells .
3. Stem the corrosive influence of money in politics .
4. Capital-inflow controls can temporarily stem a flood of foreign cash .
5. These spiral vessels are part of a banana plant stem .

more: >How to Use "stem" with Example Sentences