Nouns (48)
stock
n. the handle end of some implements or tools; "he grabbed the cue by the stock"
stock
n. lumber used in the construction of something; "they will cut round stock to 1-inch diameter"
stock
n. lumber used in the construction of something; "they will cut round stock to 1-inch diameter"
stock
n. a plant or stem onto which a graft is made; especially a plant grown specifically to provide the root part of grafted plants
stock
n. the capital raised by a corporation through the issue of shares entitling holders to an ownership interest (equity); "he owns a controlling share of the company's stock"
inch, in
n. a unit of length equal to one twelfth of a foot
inventory, stock
n. the merchandise that a shop has on hand; "they carried a vast inventory of hardware"; "they stopped selling in exact sizes in order to reduce inventory"
stock, neckcloth
n. an ornamental white cravat
stock, gunstock
n. the handle of a handgun or the butt end of a rifle or shotgun or part of the support of a machine gun or artillery gun; "the rifle had been fitted with a special stock"
stock, broth
n. liquid in which meat and vegetables are simmered; used as a basis for e.g. soups or sauces; "she made gravy with a base of beef stock"
stock, Malcolm stock
n. any of various ornamental flowering plants of the genus Malcolmia
stock, gillyflower
n. any of several Old World plants cultivated for their brightly colored flowers
stock, caudex
n. persistent thickened stem of a herbaceous perennial plant
stock, stock certificate
n. a certificate documenting the shareholder's ownership in the corporation; "the value of his stocks doubled during the past year"
indium, In, atomic number 49
n. a rare soft silvery metallic element; occurs in small quantities in sphalerite
strain, stock, variety, breed
n. a special variety of domesticated animals within a species; "he experimented on a particular breed of white rats"; "he created a new strain of sheep"
store, stock, fund
n. a supply of something available for future use; "he brought back a large store of Cuban cigars"
blood, descent, line, stock, ancestry, lineage, origin, pedigree, bloodline, parentage, line of descent, blood line
n. the descendants of one individual; "his entire lineage has been warriors"
Indiana, Hoosier State, IN
n. federate state in the United States of America
Verbs (6)
carry, stock, stockpile
v. have on hand; "Do you carry kerosene heaters?"
stock, buy in, put in stock
v. stock up on
Adverbs (5)
in, inside an enclosed space
adv. to or toward the inside of; "come in"; "smash in the door"
in, inward, inwards
adv. to or toward the inside of; "come in"; "smash in the door"
Adjectives (11)
in
adj. holding office; "the in party"
in
adj. currently fashionable; "the in thing to do"; "large shoulder pads are in"
in
adj. directed or bound inward; "took the in bus"; "the in basket"
in
adj. currently fashionable; "the in thing to do"; "large shoulder pads are in"
stock, standard, usual
adj. commonly used or supplied; "standard procedure"; "standard car equipment"
routine, stock, ready-made, cliched
adj. repeated regularly without thought or originality; "ready-made phrases"
Fuzzynyms (180)
bit, morsel
n. a small quantity of anything; "a bit of paper was all he needed"
dash, style, panache, elan, flair
n. distinctive and stylish elegance; "he wooed her with the confident dash of a cavalry officer"
molecule
n. (physics and chemistry) the simplest structural unit of an element or compound
particle, speck, atom, molecule, mote
n. (nontechnical usage) a tiny piece of anything
commodity, goods
n. articles of commerce
mixture, collection, motley, potpourri, variety, assortment, miscellany, miscellanea
n. a collection containing a variety of sorts of things; "a great assortment of cars was on display"; "he had a variety of disorders"; "a veritable smorgasbord of religions"
class
n. (biology) a taxonomic group containing one or more orders
form, sort, variety, kind, species
n. a category of things distinguished by some common characteristic or quality; "sculpture is a form of art"; "what kinds of desserts are there?"
race, subspecies
n. (biology) a taxonomic group that is a division of a species; usually arises as a consequence of geographical isolation within a species
mixture, collection, motley, potpourri, variety, assortment, miscellany, miscellanea
n. a collection containing a variety of sorts of things; "a great assortment of cars was on display"; "he had a variety of disorders"; "a veritable smorgasbord of religions"
store, storage, storehouse, depot, entrepot
n. a depository for goods; "storehouses were built close to the docks"
ration
n. a fixed portion that is allotted (especially in times of scarcity)
derivation, ancestry, lineage, filiation
n. inherited properties shared with others of your bloodline
kin, kindred, clan, tribe, kin group, kinship group
n. group of people related by blood or marriage
dynasty
n. a sequence of powerful leaders in the same family
house
n. aristocratic family line; "the House of York"
house, family, household, menage, ménage
n. a social unit living together; "he moved his family to Virginia"; "It was a good Christian household"; "I waited until the whole house was asleep"; "the teacher asked how many people made up his home"
race
n. people who are believed to belong to the same genetic stock; "some biologists doubt that there are important genetic differences between races of human beings"
parent
n. a father or mother; one who begets or one who gives birth to or nurtures and raises a child; a relative who plays the role of guardian
patriarch
n. any of the early biblical characters regarded as fathers of the human race
cache, hoard, stash, lay away, squirrel away, hive up
v. save up as for future use
collect, hoard, accumulate, amass, pile up, compile
v. get or gather together; "I am accumulating evidence for the man's unfaithfulness to his wife"; "She is amassing a lot of data for her thesis"; "She rolled up a small fortune"
save, lay aside, save up
v. feather one's nest; have a nest egg; "He saves half his salary"
deposit, bank
v. put into a bank account; "She deposits her paycheck every month"
gather, collect, congregate
v. collect in one place; "We assembled in the church basement"; "Let's gather in the dining room"
pile up, heap up, stack up
v. arrange into piles or stacks; "She piled up her books in my living room"
reserve, earmark, set aside, allow, appropriate
v. give or assign a resource to a particular person or cause; "I will earmark this money for your research"; "She sets aside time for meditation every day"
hold, reserve, retain
v. secure and keep for possible future use or application; "The landlord retained the security deposit"; "I reserve the right to disagree"
save, conserve, preserve
v. to keep up and reserve for personal or special use; "She saved the old family photographs in a drawer"
save, spend less
v. spend less; buy at a reduced price
general
adj. applying to all or most members of a category or group; "the general public"; "general assistance"; "a general rule"; "in general terms"; "comprehensible to the general reader"
usual
adj. occurring or encountered or experienced or observed frequently or in accordance with regular practice or procedure; "grew the usual vegetables"; "the usual summer heat"; "came at the usual time"; "the child's usual bedtime"
routine, usual, everyday, mundane, quotidian, workaday, unremarkable
adj. found in the ordinary course of events; "a placid everyday scene"; "it was a routine day"; "there's nothing quite like a real...train conductor to add color to a quotidian commute"- Anita Diamant
normal, average
adj. conforming with or constituting a norm or standard or level or type or social norm; not abnormal; "serve wine at normal room temperature"; "normal diplomatic relations"; "normal working hours"; "normal word order"; "normal curiosity"; "the normal course of events"
typical
adj. exhibiting the qualities or characteristics that identify a group or kind or category; "a typical American girl"; "a typical suburban community"; "the typical car owner drives 10,000 miles a year"; "a painting typical of the Impressionist school"; "a typical romantic poem"; "a typical case of arteritis"
standard
adj. conforming to or constituting a standard of measurement or value; or of the usual or regularized or accepted kind; "windows of standard width"; "standard sizes"; "the standard fixtures"; "standard brands"; "standard operating procedure"
run-of-the-mill, unexceptional
adj. not special in any way; "run-of-the-mill boxing"; "your run-of-the-mine college graduate"; "a unexceptional an incident as can be found in a lawyer's career"
generic
adj. applicable to an entire class or group; "is there a generic Asian mind?"
sweeping, wholesale
adj. ignoring distinctions; "sweeping generalizations"; "wholesale destruction"
sweeping, extensive, thorough, exhaustive
adj. broad in scope or content; "across-the-board pay increases"; "an all-embracing definition"; "blanket sanctions against human-rights violators"; "an invention with broad applications"; "a panoptic study of Soviet nationality"- T.G.Winner; "granted him wide powers"
universal, cosmopolitan, general, ecumenical, oecumenical, worldwide, world-wide
adj. of worldwide scope or applicability; "an issue of cosmopolitan import"; "the shrewdest political and ecumenical comment of our time"- Christopher Morley; "universal experience"
normal
adj. conforming with or constituting a norm or standard or level or type or social norm; not abnormal; "serve wine at normal room temperature"; "normal diplomatic relations"; "normal working hours"; "normal word order"; "normal curiosity"; "the normal course of events"
regular, veritable
adj. often used as intensifiers; "a regular morass of details"; "a regular nincompoop"; "he's a veritable swine"
normal, regular
adj. conforming to a standard or pattern; "following the regular procedure of the legislature"; "a regular electrical outlet"
regular, customary
adj. in accord with regular practice or procedure; "took his regular morning walk"; "her regular bedtime"
archetypal, archetypical, prototypal, prototypic, prototypical
adj. representing or constituting an original type after which other similar things are patterned; "archetypal patterns"; "she was the prototypal student activist"
rife, prevailing, prevalent
adj. encountered generally especially at the present time; "the prevailing opinion was that a trade war could be averted"; "the most prevalent religion in our area"; "speculation concerning the books author was rife"
conventional
adj. following accepted customs and proprieties; "conventional wisdom"; "she had strayed from the path of conventional behavior"; "conventional forms of address"
pedestrian, prosaic, prosy
adj. lacking wit or imagination; "a pedestrian movie plot"
commonplace, trivial, banal
adj. obvious and dull; "trivial conversation"; "commonplace prose"
cordial, genial, affable, amiable
adj. diffusing warmth and friendliness; "an affable smile"; "an amiable gathering"; "cordial relations"; "a cordial greeting"; "a genial host"
conventional, ceremonious
adj. rigidly formal or bound by convention; "their ceremonious greetings did not seem heartfelt"
accustomed
adj. (often followed by `to') in the habit of or adapted to; "accustomed to doing her own work"; "I've grown accustomed to her face"
accepted, received
adj. widely accepted as true or worthy; "the accepted wisdom about old age"; "a received moral idea"; "Received political wisdom says not; surveys show otherwise"- Economist
familiar, unstudied
adj. "lectured in a familiar style"
characteristic
adj. typical or distinctive; "heard my friend's characteristic laugh"; "red and gold are the characteristic colors of autumn"; "stripes characteristic of the zebra"
friendly
adj. easy to understand or use; "user-friendly computers"; "a consumer-friendly policy"; "a reader-friendly novel"
unimaginative, sterile, uninspired, uninventive
adj. deficient in originality or creativity; lacking powers of invention; "a sterile ideology lacking in originality"; "unimaginative development of a musical theme"; "uninspired writing"
predictable
adj. capable of being foretold
matter-of-fact, prosaic
adj. not fanciful or imaginative; "local guides describe the history of various places in matter-of-fact tones"; "a prosaic and unimaginative essay"
dull, uninteresting
adj. arousing no interest or attention or curiosity or excitement; "a very uninteresting account of her trip"
common, simple
adj. to be expected; standard; "common decency"
tedious, humdrum, monotonous
adj. tediously repetitious or lacking in variety; "a humdrum existence; all work and no play"; "nothing is so monotonous as the sea"
ordinary
adj. not exceptional in any way especially in quality or ability or size or degree; "ordinary everyday objects"; "ordinary decency"; "an ordinary day"; "an ordinary wine"
Synonyms (85)
purchase, take, buy
v. obtain by purchase; acquire by means of a financial transaction; "The family purchased a new car"; "The conglomerate acquired a new company"; "She buys for the big department store"
modish, stylish, in vogue, in style, a la mode, à la mode
adj. in the current fashion or style
chichi
adj. affectedly trendy and fashionable
spruce, jaunty, raffish, rakish, snappy, dapper, dashing, natty
adj. marked by up-to-dateness in dress and manners; "a dapper young man"; "a jaunty red hat"
faddish, faddy
adj. intensely fashionable for a short time
mod, modern, up-to-date, up to date
adj. relating to a recently developed fashion or style; "their offices are in a modern skyscraper"; "tables in modernistic designs";
smart
adj. of or associated with people of fashion; "the fashionable side of town"; "the smart set"
trendsetting, trend-setting
adj. initiating or popularizing a trend
trendy, voguish
adj. in accord with the latest fad; "trendy ideas"; "trendy clothes"; "voguish terminology"
inward, arriving, inbound
adj. directed or moving inward or toward a center; "the inbound train"; "inward flood of capital"
entering, ingoing
adj. "incoming class"; "the ingoing administration"; "ingoing data"
designate
adj. appointed but not yet installed in office
elect
adj. elected but not yet installed in office; "the president elect"
future, succeeding, next
adj. (of elected officers) elected but not yet serving; "our next president"
inflowing, influent
adj. flowing inward
inpouring
adj. pouring inward; "inpouring throngs of immigrants"
prosperous, flourishing, thriving, booming, roaring, palmy, prospering
adj. very lively and profitable; "flourishing businesses"; "a palmy time for stockbrokers"; "a prosperous new business"; "doing a roaring trade"; "a thriving tourist center"; "did a thriving business in orchids"
triple-crown
adj. unofficial championship title for player who heads the league in batting average and home runs and runs batted in
eminent
adj. having achieved eminence; "an eminent physician"
hitless, no-hit
adj. of a game (or the pitching) in which a pitcher allows the opponent no hits; "a no-hit pitcher"; "a no-hit game"
made
adj. successful or assured of success; "now I am a made man forever"- Christopher Marlowe
productive
adj. yielding positive results
self-made
adj. having achieved success or recognition by your own efforts; "a self-made millionaire"
winning, victorious
adj. having won; "the victorious entry"; "the winning team"
winning
adj. bringing success; "the winning run"
frequent
adj. frequently encountered; "a frequent (or common) error is using the transitive verb `lay' for the intransitive `lie'";
ordinary
adj. lacking special distinction, rank, or status; commonly encountered; "average people"; "the ordinary (or common) man in the street"
adapted
adj. changed in order to improve or made more fit for a particular purpose; "seeds precisely adapted to the area"; "instructions altered to suit the children's different ages"
banal, corny, platitudinal, platitudinous
adj. dull and tiresome but with pretensions of significance or originality; "bromidic sermons"
commonplace, trite, bromidic, hackneyed, shopworn, threadbare, timeworn, tired, well-worn
adj. repeated too often; overfamiliar through overuse; "bromidic sermons"; "his remarks were trite and commonplace"; "hackneyed phrases"; "a stock answer"; "repeating threadbare jokes"; "parroting some timeworn axiom"; "the trite metaphor `hard as nails'"
imitative, copied
adj. marked by or given to imitation; "acting is an imitative art"; "man is an imitative being"
derivative, derived
adj. resulting from or employing derivation; "a derivative process"; "a highly derivative prose style"
duplicate, triplicate
adj. identically copied from an original; "a duplicate key"
old, stale
adj. lacking originality or spontaneity; no longer new; "moth-eaten theories about race"
slavish
adj. blindly imitative; "a slavish copy of the original"
traced
adj. derived by copying something else; especially by following lines seen through a transparent sheet
Antonyms (4)
offspring, progeny
n. the immediate descendants of a person; "she was the mother of many offspring"; "he died without issue"
out
adj. not worth considering as a possibility; "a picnic is out because of the weather"
out
adv. outside of an enclosed space: "She is out"
in stock
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