stook

English

Etymology

From Middle English stowk, stouke, stouc, from or cognate with Middle Low German stûke (bundle of grain), from Middle Low German stûken (to push, bump, compress), from Old Saxon *stūkan, from Proto-Germanic *stūkaną (to be stiff, push), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)tewg- (to pound, push, beat). Cognate with West Frisian stûkje (to pile up, stop), Dutch stuiken (to bundle, stamp), German stauchen (to compress), Swedish stuka (to rick, wrench, upset), Norwegian Nynorsk stauka (to whack, chop).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /stʊk/

Noun

stook (plural stooks)

  1. A pile or bundle, especially of straw.
  2. (historical, specifically) A group of 6 or 8 sheaves of grain stacked to dry vertically in a rectangular arrangement at harvest time, obsolete since the advent of the combine harvester (mid 20th century).
    • 1932, Lewis Grassic Gibbon, Sunset Song, Polygon 2006 (A Scots Quair), p. 16:
      And on the road home they lay among the stooks and maybe Ellison did this and that to make sure of getting her, he was fair desperate for any woman by then.
    • 1958, Iris Murdoch, The Bell:
      The wheat, tawny with ripeness, had been cut and stood in tented stooks about the fields, while a few ghostly poppies lingered at the edge of the path.

Translations

Verb

stook (third-person singular simple present stooks, present participle stooking, simple past and past participle stooked)

  1. (intransitive, agriculture) To make stooks.

Derived terms

Translations

Anagrams


Dutch

Pronunciation

  • (file)

Verb

stook

  1. first-person singular present indicative of stoken
  2. imperative of stoken

Scots

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /stuk/

Noun

stook (plural stooks)

  1. sheaf, bundle (of straw)
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