up the stump
English
Alternative forms
Prepositional phrase
- (informal) At a loss, puzzled, in a bind.
- 1900, Queensland Agricultural Journal, Volume 7, page 216:
- Science is up the stump. She can't find out why green sorghum should be so quickly fatal to cattle, says an exchange.
- 1907, The American Journal of Clinical Medicine, Volume 14, page 662:
- He said old Dr. Blank had been attending to him all day, but was “up the stump” and wanted me to help.
- 2001, Suzanne L. Bunkers, Diaries of Girls and Women: A Midwestern American Sampler, University of Wisconsin Press (2001), →ISBN, page 218:
- Just today I gave his history class a few questions to answer and hand in, but when it came time to answering the last two he was up the stump.
- For more examples of usage of this term, see Citations:up the stump.
- 1900, Queensland Agricultural Journal, Volume 7, page 216:
- (Canada, informal) Pregnant.
- 1976, Richard B. Wright, Farthings Fortune's, Macmillan of Canada (1976), →ISBN, page 266:
- Met him at a dance, a skinny little French-Canadian who shot her a line of bull and put her up the stump before waving goodbye from the troop train.
- 1987, Anne Cameron, Stubby Amberchuk & The Holy Grail, Harbour Publishing (1987), →ISBN, page 75:
- "I'm real glad that you told me. When your mom and I got married, it was because she was up the stump, you know that, huh?"
- 1989, David Helwig, A Postcard from Rome, Penguin Books (1989), →ISBN, page 100:
- You're up the stump, Edith Fulton. You're going to have a baby.
- For more examples of usage of this term, see Citations:up the stump.
- 1976, Richard B. Wright, Farthings Fortune's, Macmillan of Canada (1976), →ISBN, page 266:
Synonyms
- (pregnant): see also Thesaurus:pregnant.
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