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    stuck
    /stʌk/
    • 1. past participle of stick

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. STUCK definition: 1. past simple and past participle of stick 2. unable to move, or set in a particular position…. Learn more.

  3. Synonyms for STUCK: jammed, tight, glued, frozen, embedded, lodged, wedged, attached; Antonyms of STUCK: loose, insecure, detached, unsecured, unattached, freed, undone, unbound.

  4. Define stuck. stuck synonyms, stuck pronunciation, stuck translation, English dictionary definition of stuck. v. Past tense and past participle of stick. American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin...

  5. STUCK definition: 1. not able to move anywhere: 2. not able to continue reading, answering questions, etc because…. Learn more.

  6. The meaning of STUCK is past tense and past participle of stick.

  7. If something is stuck at a particular level or stage, it is not progressing or changing. The negotiations have got stuck on a number of key issues. U.S. unemployment figures for March showed the jobless rate stuck at 7 per cent. The economy is still stuck in recession.

  8. Stuck definition: simple past tense and past participle of stick2. . See examples of STUCK used in a sentence.

  9. stuck (on something) unable to answer or understand something. I got stuck on the first question. I'll help you if you're stuck. stuck (for something) not knowing what to do in a particular situation. If you're stuck for something to do tonight, come out with us. I've never known him to be stuck for words before.

  10. They got stuck in a traffic jam. stuck in The boat was stuck in the mud. I’ve got something stuck in my throat. 2 ESCAPE# informal unable to escape from a bad or boring situation stuck in/at Mum resented being stuck at home with two young kids.

  11. Stuck describes something that's frozen or fixed in one place and can't be moved. If your foot gets stuck in the mud, it means you can't get your foot out of its messy trap. The lid of a jar can be stuck, and your car can get stuck in traffic; either way, the thing that's stuck isn't going anywhere.

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