stickup
or stick-up
[ stik-uhp ]
/ ˈstɪkˌʌp /
noun Informal.
a holdup; robbery.
Origin of stickup
First recorded in 1855–60; noun use of verb phrase
stick up
Words nearby stickup
stickout,
stickpin,
stickseed,
sticktight,
stickum,
stickup,
stickup man,
stickweed,
stickwork,
sticky,
sticky blood
Definition for stick-up (2 of 2)
Origin of stick
2SYNONYMS FOR stick
6
transfix.
9
pin.
22
Stick,
adhere,
cohere mean to cling to or be tightly attached to something.
Adhere implies that one kind of material clings tenaciously to another;
cohere adds the idea that a thing is attracted to and held by something like itself:
Particles of sealing wax cohere and form a mass that will adhere to tin.
Stick, a more colloquial and general term, is used particularly when a third kind of material is involved:
A gummed label will stick to a package.
29 stickle, waver, doubt.
OTHER WORDS FROM stick
stick·a·ble, adjective stick·a·bil·i·ty, noun re·stick·a·ble, adjectiveExample sentences from the Web for stick-up
British Dictionary definitions for stick-up (1 of 3)
stick-up
noun
slang, mainly US
a robbery at gunpoint; hold-up
verb stick up (adverb)
(tr) slang, mainly US
to rob, esp at gunpoint
(intr foll by for) informal
to support or defend
stick up for oneself
British Dictionary definitions for stick-up (2 of 3)
stick
1
/ (stɪk) /
noun
verb sticks, sticking or sticked
to support (a plant) with sticks; stake
Word Origin for stick
Old English
sticca; related to Old Norse
stikka, Old High German
stecca
British Dictionary definitions for stick-up (3 of 3)
stick
2
/ (stɪk) /
verb sticks, sticking or stuck
noun
See also
stick around,
stick at,
stick by,
stick down,
stick out,
stick to,
stick together,
stick-up,
stick with,
stuck
Word Origin for stick
Old English
stician; related to Old High German
stehhan to sting, Old Norse
steikja to roast on a spit
Idioms and Phrases with stick-up
stick