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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 · 1 Answer. Sorted by: 21. 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. Mar 15, 2016 · A fork in the road is a point at which one has to make a decision — left or right, so to speak. If the fork is “stuck in the road”, then that means that one cannot get away from this decision point. That could just mean that one is haunted by the effects of one’s decision, but that is not saying anything surprising… and the fork is ...

  5. Jan 9, 2018 · Prime example as to why stack exchange is so great. – Iam Pyre. Jan 9, 2018 at 6:06. 1. "get stuck" is best, but the reason is different. It is because there is a change of state (not stuck in traffic --> stuck in traffic). be can only be used in the moment, which is not the case in the example. – user3169. Jan 9, 2018 at 6:16.

  6. Apr 10, 2016 · I did misrepresent your argument though. I apologize. 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 ...

  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.

  8. 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 ...

  9. Aug 27, 2016 · 1. It's really two separate phrases - "he has stuck with me" and "philosophy and all". – stangdon. Aug 27, 2016 at 23:06. Add a comment. 1 Answer. Sorted by: 3. That construction could mean something like "He has remained true and loyal to me, in spite of my philosophy and everything else about me which would be difficult for anyone to abide ...

  10. Apr 23, 2021 · Short answer: the phrase, "In Geneva, a historic deal is struck" means: some people successfully make a very important agreement in Geneva. Strike is one of those seemingly simple verbs that actually has very many meanings, some of them quite different from others. Look at this entry in the Merriam-Webster dictionary: https://www.merriam ...

  11. Jan 14, 2018 · 3. They are interchangeable but only in the context of something stuck somewhere: I see the problem: you've got half a carrot stuck/lodged in the rotor of your washing machine. Stuck has various other meanings, which lodge does not. Some examples where lodge would not work: I'm stuck on this math problem. The gum is stuck to the bottom of my desk.

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