stub
nounEtymology
From Middle English stubbe (“tree stump”), from Old English stybb, stubb (“tree stump”), from Proto-West Germanic *stubb, from Proto-Germanic *stubbaz (compare Middle Dutch stubbe, Old Norse stubbr, Faroese stubbi (“stub”)), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)tew-; compare steep (“sharp slope”). Doublet of stob. Sense extended in Middle English to similarly shaped objects. Verb sense “strike one’s toe” is recorded 1848; “extinguish a cigarette” 1927.
Definitions
Something blunted, stunted, or cut short, such as stubble or a stump.
- And prickly stubs instead of trees are found.
A piece of certain paper items, designed to be torn off and kept for record or…
A piece of certain paper items, designed to be torn off and kept for record or identification purposes.
- check stub
- ticket stub
- payment stub
A placeholder procedure that has the signature of the planned procedure but does not yet…
A placeholder procedure that has the signature of the planned procedure but does not yet implement the intended behavior.
- Even though the stub is a dummy, it allows us to determine whether the procedure is called at the right time by the program or calling procedure.
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A procedure that translates requests from external systems into a format suitable for…
A procedure that translates requests from external systems into a format suitable for processing and then submits those requests for processing.
- The server performs the server RPC runtime library functions to accept the request and call the server stub procedure. […] After this, the server stub calls the actual procedure on the server.
A row heading in a table (with horizontal reference, whereas a column heading has…
A row heading in a table (with horizontal reference, whereas a column heading has vertical reference).
An article providing only minimal information and intended for later development.
- A stub is usually long enough to serve as a quick definition, but too short to provide encyclopedic coverage of a subject (see Figure 4-2).
A length of transmission line or waveguide that is connected at one end only.
The remaining part of the docked tail of a dog
An unequal first or last interest calculation period, as a part of a financial swap…
An unequal first or last interest calculation period, as a part of a financial swap contract
A log or block of wood.
A blockhead.
A pen with a short, blunt nib.
An old and worn horseshoe nail.
Stub iron.
The smallest remainder of a smoked cigarette
The smallest remainder of a smoked cigarette; a butt.
To remove most of a tree, bush, or other rooted plant by cutting it close to the ground.
To remove a plant by pulling it out by the roots.
To jam, hit, or bump, especially a toe.
- I stubbed my toe trying to find the light switch in the dark.
The neighborhood
Derived
candlestub, pay stub, pencil stub, stub axle, stubbie, stubbify, stubby, stub end, stubify, stubless, stublike, stub mortise, stub nail, stubtail, stub-tailed morpho, stub twist, stubber, stub out, unstubbed
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for stub. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA