HALT vs STEM: NOUN
- A minor railway station (usually unstaffed) in the United Kingdom.
- A cessation, either temporary or permanent.
- Lameness; a limp.
- The act of limping; lameness.
- A stop in marching or walking, or in any action; arrest of progress.
- A stop; a suspension of progress in walking, riding, or going in any manner, and especially in marching.
- A disease in sheep.
- The act of limping; lameness; a defect in gait.
- A suspension of movement or progress, especially a temporary one.
- The state of inactivity following an interruption
- The event of something ending
- An interruption or temporary suspension of progress or movement
- In philology, a derivative from a root, having itself inflected forms, whether of declension or of conjugation, made from it; the unchanged part in a series of inflectional forms, from which the forms are viewed as made by additions; base; crude form.
- In musical notation, a vertical line added to the head of certain kinds of notes.
- In entomology, the base of a clavate antenna, including all the joints except the enlarged outer ones: used especially in descriptions of the Lepidoptera.
- In ornithology, the whole shaft of a feather.
- In zoology and anatomy, any slender, especially axial, part like the stem of a plant; a stalk, stipe, rachis, footstalk, etc.
- The projecting rod of a reciprocating valve, serving to guide it in its action. See cut under slide-valve.
- In a vehicle, a bar to which the bow of a falling hood is hinged.
- In type-founding, the thick stroke or body-mark of a roman or italic letter. See cut under type.
- Anything resembling the stem of a plant.
- A branch of a family; an offshoot.
- The stock of a family; a race; ancestry.
- The stalk which supports the flower or the fruit of a plant; the peduncle of the fructification, or the pedicel of a flower; the petiole or leaf-stem. See cuts under pedicel, peduncle, and petiole.
- The body of a tree, shrub, or plant; the firm part which supports the branches; the stock; the stalk; technically, the ascending axis, which ordinarily grows in an opposite direction to the root or descending axis.
- The forward part of a vessel; the bow.
- A curved piece of timber or metal to which the two sides of a ship are united at the foremost end.
- The tubular glass structure mounting the filament or electrodes in an incandescent bulb or vacuum tube.
- The curved upright beam at the fore of a vessel into which the hull timbers are scarfed to form the prow.
- The main part of a word to which affixes are added.
- The main line of descent of a family.
- The vertical line extending from the head of a note.
- The upright stroke of a typeface or letter.
- The shaft of a feather or hair.
- The rounded rod in the center of certain locks about which the key fits and is turned.
- The small projecting shaft with an expanded crown by which a watch is wound.
- The slender upright support of a wineglass or goblet.
- A connecting or supporting part, especially.
- A banana stalk bearing several bunches of bananas.
- A slender stalk supporting or connecting another plant part, such as a leaf or flower.
- The main ascending part of a plant; a stalk or trunk.
- (linguistics) the form of a word after all affixes are removed
- Front part of a vessel or aircraft
- A slender or elongated structure that supports a plant or fungus or a plant part or plant organ
- Cylinder forming a long narrow part of something
- A turn made in skiing; the back of one ski is forced outward and the other ski is brought parallel to it
- The tube of a tobacco pipe
HALT vs STEM: ADJECTIVE
- Disabled in the feet or legs
- Lame, limping.
- Halting or stopping in walking; lame.
- Lame; crippled.
- N/A
HALT vs STEM: VERB
- To cause to discontinue.
- To bring to a stop.
- To stop either temporarily or permanently.
- To stop marching.
- To falter.
- To waver.
- To limp.
- Stop the flow of a liquid
- Come to a halt, stop moving
- Stop from happening or developing
- Cause to stop
- Remove the stem from
- Stop the flow of a liquid
- Cause to point inward
- Grow out of, have roots in, originate in
HALT vs STEM: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To have an irregular rhythm; to be defective.
- To walk lamely; to limp.
- To stand in doubt whether to proceed, or what to do; to hesitate; to be uncertain.
- To hold one's self from proceeding; to hold up; to cease progress; to stop for a longer or shorter period; to come to a stop; to stand still.
- To stop; pause.
- To cause to stop: : stop.
- To be defective or proceed poorly, as in the development of an argument in logic or in the rhythmic structure of verse.
- To proceed or act with uncertainty or indecision; waver.
- To walk lamely or move in an irregular fashion.
- To stem a ski or both skis, as in making a turn.
- To turn (a ski, usually the uphill ski) by moving the heel outward.
- To plug or tamp (a blast hole, for example).
- To restrain or stop.
- To stop or stanch (a flow).
- To make headway against (a tide or current, for example).
- To provide with a stem.
- To remove the stem of.
- To have or take origin or descent.
HALT vs STEM: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To cause to cease marching; to stop.
- N/A
HALT vs STEM: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Cause to come to an abrupt stop
- 3d pers. sing. pres. of hold, contraction for holdeth.
- A Middle English contraction of haldeth, equivalent to holdeth, third person singular of the present indicative of hold.
- To bring to a stand; cause to cease marching: as, the general halted his troops.
- To stop in walking or going; cease to advance; stop for a longer or shorter time on a march, as a body of troops.
- To be lame, faulty, or defective, as in connection of ideas, or in measure or versification: as, a halting metaphor; a halting sonnet.
- To stand in doubt; hesitate; linger; delay.
- To limp; move with a limping gait.
- Lame; not able to walk without limping.
- A turn made in skiing
- An old spelling of steam.
- To head; advance head on.
- To make headway (as a ship); especially, to make progress in opposition to some obstruction, as a current of water or the wind.
- To make headway against by sailing or swimming, as a tide or current; hence, in general, to make headway against (opposition of any kind).
- To keep (a vessel) on its course; steer.
- To dash against with the stem (of a vessel).
- To tamp; make tight, as a joint, with a lute or cement.
- To stop; check; dam up, as a stream.
- To remove the stem of; separate from the stem: as, to stem tobacco.
- (idiom) (from stem to stern) From one end to another.
HALT vs STEM: RELATED WORDS
- Unfit, Stay, Staunch, Hitch, Arrest, Hold, Settle, Stoppage, Block, Crippled, Stem, Kibosh, Stanch, Freeze, Stop
- Prevent, Curb, Root word, Theme, Prow, Shank, Base, Fore, Bow, Stalk, Radical, Staunch, Halt, Root, Stanch
HALT vs STEM: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Lame, Unfit, Stay, Staunch, Hitch, Arrest, Hold, Settle, Stoppage, Block, Crippled, Stem, Stanch, Freeze, Stop
- Curtail, Counteract, Quell, Prevent, Curb, Theme, Prow, Shank, Base, Fore, Radical, Staunch, Halt, Root, Stanch
HALT vs STEM: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Halt Auction from being reviewed as clearly erroneous.
- Japanese cry halt, for this is sacred ground.
- NOTE: This message does not halt the Loader.
- Oversoul spectre could halt the great evil beast.
- These actions detect and halt specific Windows processes.
- Regional Water Quality Control Board had ordered halt Regional Water Quality Control Board had ordered halt to hookups until extra sewer capacity created.
- Halt at a station as per the scheduled halt time as prescribed in main Indian railway time table has time.
- May or may not halt at a Station as per the scheduled halt time for this train starts at and.
- To Halt, Step, Walk, and Resume a task Halt button will become active after you select a running task.
- To halt from double time, the command Flight, HALT is given as either foot strikes the ground, with four steps between commands.
- The NASA STEM Engagement site offers STEM resources, activities, lesson plans, virtual field trips, and more!
- University of South Alabama: Leukemic stem cells, stem cell therapy and tissue repair.
- Managing STEM Personnel to Meet Future STEM Needs Across the Air Force.
- The stem of a cactus plant stores water in its thick stem.
- Stem cells are found in adults, but the most promising types of stem cells for therapy are embryonic stem cells.
- Important to the positive STEM perception development of underrepresented students in STEM are opportunities to participate in authentic STEM learning experiences.
- STEM courses and programs, virtual labs, gaming and simulation, mobile applications, STEM career and transfer resources, and STEM research.
- Surveys of comfort level with STEM, knowledge of STEM, and perceptions of STEM were given to collect data in a demographic instrument.
- STEM Learning operates the National STEM Learning Centre and Network, alongside other projects supporting STEM education.
- Irregular verbs: Explanation of how to conjugate stem changers Stem changer worksheet Stem changer practice.
HALT vs STEM: QUESTIONS
- When did Narborough and Pentney become an unstaffed halt?
- How many trains halt at H Nizamuddin railway station?
- How to become a halt agent of Tiruchchirappalli railway?
- What does the T12 halt mean for Root9B shareholders?
- Does anxiety halt the acquisition of a second language?
- Why did China halt freight traffic with North Korea?
- Why is Genetic Technologies Limited in a trading halt?
- Is Scotts Turf Builder halt and Winterguard herbicides?
- Could president Biden halt the Dakota Access Pipeline?
- Can a Jupyter Notebook programmatically halt itself?
- Do leukemic stem cells and normal hematopoietic stem cells compete for function?
- Are A10 and a7r5 neural stem cell markers for vascular stem cells?
- What should the stem height be when replacing a headset stem?
- What is the stem length of a synthetic RNA stem loop?
- Is CD90 a useful stem cell marker in hepatic stem cells?
- Does stem have anything to do with stem cell research?
- Are STAP stem-cell lines contaminated with embryonic stem cells?
- How does cigarette smoke affect stem cell stem cells?
- Why choose Dayton Regional STEM school for STEM education?
- How are stem cells collected for stem cell donation?