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

Definition for stick-up (2 of 2)

Origin of stick

2
before 900; Middle English stiken, Old English stician to pierce, thrust; akin to German stechen to sting, Latin -stīg- in instīgāre (see instigate), Greek stízein (see stigma)

SYNONYMS FOR stick

9 pin.
12 glue, cement, paste.
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, adjective

Example 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

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