stub

noun
/stʌb/

Etymology

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.

  1. derived from *(s)tew-
  2. inherited from *stubbaz
  3. inherited from *stubb
  4. inherited from stybb
  5. inherited from stubbe

Definitions

  1. Something blunted, stunted, or cut short, such as stubble or a stump.

    • And prickly stubs instead of trees are found.
  2. 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
  3. 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.
  4. + 15 more definitions
    1. 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.
    2. 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).

    3. 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).
    4. A length of transmission line or waveguide that is connected at one end only.

    5. The remaining part of the docked tail of a dog

    6. 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

    7. A log or block of wood.

    8. A blockhead.

    9. A pen with a short, blunt nib.

    10. An old and worn horseshoe nail.

    11. Stub iron.

    12. The smallest remainder of a smoked cigarette

      The smallest remainder of a smoked cigarette; a butt.

    13. To remove most of a tree, bush, or other rooted plant by cutting it close to the ground.

    14. To remove a plant by pulling it out by the roots.

    15. To jam, hit, or bump, especially a toe.

      • I stubbed my toe trying to find the light switch in the dark.

The neighborhood

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