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stock

/stok/US // stɒk //UK // (stɒk) //

股票,库存,股价,股市

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a supply of goods kept on hand for sale to customers by a merchant, distributor, manufacturer, etc.; inventory.
    • : a quantity of something accumulated, as for future use: a stock of provisions.
    • : livestock.
    • : Theater. a stock company: a job in summer stock.
    • : Finance. the outstanding capital of a company or corporation.the shares of a particular company or corporation.the certificate of ownership of such stock; stock certificate. a tally or stick used in transactions between a debtor and a creditor.
    • : Horticulture. Also called understock. in grafting, a stem in which the bud or scion is inserted.a stem, tree, or plant that furnishes slips or cuttings; stock plant.
    • : the trunk or main stem of a tree or other plant, as distinguished from roots and branches.
    • : the type from which a group of animals or plants has been derived.
    • : a species or other related group of animals or plants.
    • : the person from whom a given line of descent is derived; the original progenitor.
    • : Anthropology. a line of descent or lineage; a racial or ethnic group.
    • : Linguistics. a category consisting of language families that, because of resemblances in grammatical structure and vocabulary, are considered likely to be related by common origin.Compare family, phylum.
    • : any grouping of related languages.
    • : the handle of a whip, fishing rod, etc.
    • : Firearms. the wooden or metal piece to which the barrel and mechanism of a rifle are attached.a part of an automatic weapon, as a machine gun, similar in position or function.
    • : the trunk or stump of a tree, left standing.
    • : a dull or stupid person.
    • : something lifeless or senseless.
    • : the main upright part of anything, especially a supporting structure.
    • : stocks, a former instrument of punishment consisting of a framework with holes for securing the ankles and, sometimes, the wrists, used to expose an offender to public derision.Compare pillory. a frame in which a horse or other animal is secured in a standing position for shoeing or for a veterinary operation.the frame on which a boat rests while under construction.
    • : Nautical. a vertical shaft forming part of a rudder and controlling the rudder's movement.a transverse piece of wood or metal near the ring on some anchors.
    • : the metal or wooden body of a carpenter's plane.
    • : Metallurgy. material being smelted in a blast furnace.a metal piece to be forged.
    • : Printing. a specified quality or kind of paper: glossy stock; card stock; offset stock.the paper for printing a particular job: We don't have enough stock for that large a run.
    • : the raw material from which something is made.
    • : Papermaking. stuff.
    • : Cooking. the liquor or broth prepared by boiling meat, fish, chicken, etc., with or without vegetables or seasonings, and used especially as a foundation for soups and sauces.
    • : any of several plants belonging to the genus Matthiola, of the mustard family, especially M. incana, having fragrant white, blue, purple, reddish, or yellowish flowers.
    • : a rhizome or rootstock.
    • : Zoology. a compound organism, as a colony of corals.
    • : a collar or a neckcloth fitting like a band around the neck.
    • : Cards. the portion of a pack of cards that, in certain games, is not dealt out to the players, but is left on the table, to be drawn from as occasion requires.
    • : an adjustable wrench for holding dies for cutting screws.
    • : Railroads. rolling stock.
    • : Dominoes. boneyard.
    • : Informal. stock car.
    • : Roman Catholic Church. one of a set of three metal containers for holy oil.
    • : Geology, Mining. an irregular igneous intrusion, usually an offshoot of a batholith, often mineralized.
    • : Archaic. a stocking.
    • : Obsolete. the frame of a plow to which the share, handles, etc., are attached.
adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : kept regularly on hand, as for use or sale; staple; standard: stock articles.
    • : having as one's job the care of a concern's goods: a stock clerk.
    • : of the common or ordinary type; in common use: a stock argument.
    • : banal; commonplace: a stock remark.
    • : pertaining to or designating the breeding and raising of livestock: stock farming.
    • : Southern U.S. . being a fully grown male: a stock hog.
    • : of or relating to the stock of a company or corporation: a stock report.
    • : Theater. pertaining to a stock company. appearing together in a repertoire, as a company.forming part of a repertoire, as a play.being a character type fixed by convention, as in the commedia dell'-arte, a harlequinade, minstrel show, or the like.
    • : Informal. of, relating to, or characteristic of a stock car.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to furnish with a stock or supply.
    • : to furnish with stock, as a farm with horses, cattle, etc.
    • : to lay up in store, as for future use.
    • : to fasten to or provide with a stock, as a rifle, plow, bell, anchor, etc.
    • : to put in the stocks as a punishment.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to lay in a stock of something.

Synonyms & Antonyms

adj.commonplace
Forms: stocked, stocking

Examples

  • The stock closed at $253, more than double the $120 the price at which the company and its bankers initially valued them.

  • Taking the company public in 2012 at a valuation of about $2 billion, ServiceNow today has a stock market value of almost $90 billion.

  • As for value stocks, investors are getting the message on that front too.

  • The worst crash in the company’s stock was a plunge of almost 95%.

  • Nikola's stock lost 11 percent on Thursday and is down an additional 15 percent in Friday morning trading.

  • In our headlong quest for a legally perfect society, we don’t take the time to take stock of what‘s been created so far.

  • If his 20s were about traveling and his 30s “about taking stock,” he hopes his 40s will be about “building and expanding.”

  • The obnoxious meddling journalist is a stock character in fiction.

  • On Friday, the stock market hit new highs—even as wages were stagnating.

  • Yes, the stock market is booming but overwhelmingly Americans are unhappy with their economic situation—and for good reason.

  • Neither privately owned nor government stock is entitled to voting power.

  • I didn't take much stock in the yarn at the time, but I'm beginning to think he had it straight.

  • One day she had heard a man say, "If there is a drought we shall have the devil to pay with our stock before winter is over."

  • Cotton exchanges reopened on November 16, and stock exchanges opened for restricted trading shortly thereafter.

  • The white ranchmen in the valley were all fencing in their lands; no more free running of stock.