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- Dictionarystamp/stamp/
verb
- 1. bring down (one's foot) heavily on the ground or on something on the ground: "he stamped his foot in frustration"
- 2. impress a pattern or mark on (a surface, object, or document) using an engraved or inked block or die: "the woman stamped my passport" Similar
noun
- 1. an instrument for stamping a pattern or mark, in particular an engraved or inked block or die.
- 2. a small adhesive piece of paper stuck to something to show that an amount of money has been paid, in particular a postage stamp: "a first-class stamp"
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STAMP definition: 1. a small piece of paper with a picture or pattern on it that is stuck onto a letter or package…. Learn more.
The meaning of STAMP is to pound or crush with a pestle or a heavy instrument. How to use stamp in a sentence.
A stamp is a small block of wood or metal which has a pattern or a group of letters on one side. You press it onto an pad of ink and then onto a piece of paper in order to produce a mark on the paper. The mark that you produce is also called a stamp.
Definition of stamp noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.
a tool for putting a special ink mark on something, or the mark made by it: a stamp in a passport. stamp of approval. official, public approval: The president has put his stamp of approval on the proposal.
stamp. noun. /stæmp/ on letter/package. (formal postage stamp) [countable] a small piece of paper with a design on it that you buy and stick on an envelope or a package before you post it a 20-cent stamp The U.S. postal service is raising the price for a first-class stamp by two cents.
Definitions of 'stamp' 1. A stamp or a postage stamp is a small piece of paper which you stick on an envelope or package before you mail it to pay for the cost of the postage. [...] 2. A stamp is a small block of wood or metal which has a pattern or a group of letters on one side.