Idioms for stand

Origin of stand

before 900; Middle English standen (v.), Old English standan; cognate with Old Saxon standan, Middle Dutch standen, Old High German stantan, standa, standan; akin to Latin stāre to stand, sistere, Greek histánai to make stand, Sanskrit sthā to stand, Old Irish at-tá (he) is

synonym study for stand

25. See bear1.

British Dictionary definitions for stand on (1 of 2)

stand on

verb (intr)

(adverb) to continue to navigate a vessel on the same heading
(preposition) to insist on to stand on ceremony
stand on one's own feet or stand on one's own two feet informal to be independent or self-reliant

British Dictionary definitions for stand on (2 of 2)

stand
/ (stænd) /

verb stands, standing or stood (mainly intr)

noun

Derived forms of stand

stander, noun

Word Origin for stand

Old English standan; related to Old Norse standa, Old High German stantan, Latin stāre to stand; see stead

Idioms and Phrases with stand on (1 of 2)

stand on

1

Be based on, depend on, as in Our success will stand on their support. [c. 1600]

2

Insist on observance of, as in Let's not stand on ceremony. This usage today is nearly always put in a negative context. [Mid-1500s]

Idioms and Phrases with stand on (2 of 2)

stand