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    stuck
    /stʌk/
    • 1. past participle of stick

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Jun 12, 2020 · "I was stuck" is talking about a past condition, while "I got stuck" is talking about a past event. "I got stuck" implies you're speaking about a specific moment in the past when this occurred. In a longer form, you might say, "As I was crawling through the tunnel, the rocks shifted, and I got stuck."

  3. Mar 26, 2016 · For most verbs, we form the simple past and the past participle by adding -ed to the verb, for example kick - kicked - kicked. Stick is irregular: the simple past and past participle are formed as follows: stick - stuck - stuck. There is no "stucked". This kind of mistake is often made by English children.

  4. Bad traffic is something that can surround you, and therefore you would be stuck in it. An area of bad traffic is also something you can enter, and therefore you would get stuck in it. So, it's two ways of expressing the same thing, though get stuck leans more toward implying you are willfully entering already bad traffic, versus traffic becoming bad as you travel.

  5. May 7, 2023 · These do not have the same meaning. When it is possible to physically attach to something, then "stick to" means to attach physically or stay physically in close proximity, and stick with means to symbolically continue or commit. Another example of this case: The floor is very dirty, I'm sticking to it! (My feet are getting physically stuck to ...

  6. It is a quote from an internet discussion. It concerns the verdict in the trial. Can you tell me what the meaning of "so stuck up" could be in the context. I know that pharse "stuck-up" means snobbish but in my sentence it does not fit. I would interpret it as "You are so blindly confirmed that the verdict was OK". But not sure.

  7. 1.b. That was a difficult exam, but I got stuck in the third question which was truly difficult to answer. Or. 2.a. I got stuck in my exam when there were two options which looked similar. 2.b. I got stuck on my exam when there were two options which looked similar. Also, I am wondering if this verb is used in the same situations in AE.

  8. Oct 30, 2016 · You can get stuck with your mother in law for the weekend. You can get stuck by the side of the road. You can get stuck in the mud. You can get stuck half way up/down a mountain. You can get stuck climbing through a narrow window. You can get stuck on a difficult problem - or a window ledge. You can get stuck between a rock and a hard place.

  9. See these two expressions: Every time I park my car here, there are tons of fliers stuck on the windshield when I come back to pick it up. Every time I park my car here, there are tons of fliers

  10. Mar 15, 2016 · The 'a fork stuck in the road' verse is a metaphor to indicate the juncture in our lives where the road we have been comfortably travelling on the journey of life abruptly splits in two different directions and the traveller is now forced to make a fateful decision on which of the two directions to take, not knowing where each of the two roads might take him.

  11. Jan 16, 2021 · Sara tried to open the window but it was stuck. We got stuck in a traffic jam. If they are/get stuck in Brazil it means they can't leave the country. They can't get home. (Perhaps there are no planes.) If they get stuck out there, they will just have to stick it out! (That DOES mean 'endure it'!) Lexico (See definitions 4.1 to 4.4 of the verb ...

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