stoop
English
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A stoop in New York City.
Noun
stoop (plural stoops)
- (chiefly Northeastern US, chiefly New York, also Canada) The staircase and landing or porch leading to the entrance of a residence.
- 1856 James Fenimore Cooper, Satanstoe or The Littlepage Manuscripts: A Tale of the Colony (London, 1856) page 110
- Nearly all the houses were built with their gables to the streets and each had heavy wooden Dutch stoops, with seats, at its door.
- 1905 Carpentry and Building, vol. 27 (January 1905), NY: David Williams Company, page 2
- ...the entrance being at the side of the house and reached by a low front stoop with four or five risers...
- 1856 James Fenimore Cooper, Satanstoe or The Littlepage Manuscripts: A Tale of the Colony (London, 1856) page 110
- (US) The threshold of a doorway, a doorstep.
- 1902, Gustav Kobbé, Signora: a child of the opera house, page 15:
- A short flight of iron steps leads up to it and a storm door is built over the stoop, forming a little vestibule, and serving to keep out the gusts.
- 1975, Laurraine Goreau, Just Mahalia, Baby: The Mahalia Jackson Story, page 248:
- You better hurry up and get strong, if you going to carry me across the stoop.
- 1999, Nora Gallagher, Things Seen and Unseen: A Year Lived in Faith, page 115:
- She grins at me and lifts her walker over the stoop.
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Related terms
Translations
Etymology 2
From Old English stūpian (“to bow, to bend”). Compare steep. Cognate with Dutch stuipen (“to bend the upper part of the body forward and downward”).
Verb
stoop (third-person singular simple present stoops, present participle stooping, simple past and past participle stooped)
- To bend the upper part of the body forward and downward to a half-squatting position; crouch.
- He stooped to tie his shoe-laces.
- 1900, Charles W. Chesnutt, The House Behind the Cedars, Chapter I,
- Their walk had continued not more than ten minutes when they crossed a creek by a wooden bridge and came to a row of mean houses standing flush with the street. At the door of one, an old black woman had stooped to lift a large basket, piled high with laundered clothes.
- To lower oneself; to demean or do something below one's status, standards, or morals.
- Can you believe that a salesman would stoop so low as to hide his customers' car keys until they agreed to the purchase?
- Of a bird of prey: to swoop down on its prey.
- 1882 [1875], Thomas Bewick, James Reiveley, William Harvey, The Parlour Menagerie, 4th ed., p. 63:
- Presently the bird stooped and seized a salmon, and a violent struggle ensued.
- 1882 [1875], Thomas Bewick, James Reiveley, William Harvey, The Parlour Menagerie, 4th ed., p. 63:
- (transitive) To cause to incline downward; to slant.
- to stoop a cask of liquor
- (transitive) To cause to submit; to prostrate.
- Chapman
- Many of those whose states so tempt thine ears / Are stooped by death; and many left alive.
- Chapman
- To yield; to submit; to bend, as by compulsion; to assume a position of humility or subjection.
- Dryden
- Mighty in her ships stood Carthage long, […] / Yet stooped to Rome, less wealthy, but more strong.
- Addison
- These are arts, my prince, / In which your Zama does not stoop to Rome.
- Dryden
- To descend from rank or dignity; to condescend.
- Goldsmith
- She stoops to conquer.
- Francis Bacon
- Where men of great wealth stoop to husbandry, it multiplieth riches exceedingly.
- Goldsmith
- To degrade.
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Shakespeare to this entry?)
Derived terms
Translations
to bend the upper part of the body forward and downward
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to lower oneself; to demean or do something below one's status, standards, or morals
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Noun
stoop (plural stoops)
- A stooping, bent position of the body.
- The old man walked with a stoop.
- An accelerated descent in flight, as that for an attack.
- 1819, Washington Irving, Bracebridge Hall: Hawking:
- At length the hawk got the upper hand, and made a rushing stoop at her quarry
- 1819, Washington Irving, Bracebridge Hall: Hawking:
Derived terms
Translations
Etymology 3
From Middle English, from Old Norse stolpe.
Alternative forms
Noun
stoop (plural stoops)
- (dialectal) A post or pillar, especially a gatepost or a support in a mine.
Derived terms
- stoup and room
Etymology 4
Old English stope.
Noun
stoop (plural stoops)
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