stud
1 Americannoun
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a boss, knob, nailhead, or other protuberance projecting from a surface or part, especially as an ornament.
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any of various buttonlike, usually ornamental objects, mounted on a shank that is passed through an article of clothing to fasten it.
a collar stud.
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any of a number of slender, upright members of wood, steel, etc., forming the frame of a wall or partition and covered with plasterwork, siding, etc.
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any of various projecting pins, lugs, or the like, on machines or other implements.
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Automotive. any of a large number of small projecting lugs embedded in an automobile tire studded tire to improve traction on snowy or icy roads.
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an earring consisting of a small, buttonlike ornament mounted on a metal post designed to pass through a pierced ear lobe.
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Horology. the piece to which the fixed end of a hairspring is attached.
verb (used with object)
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to set with or as if with studs, bosses, or the like.
The leather-covered door was studded with brass nails.
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(of things) to be scattered over the expanse or surface of.
Stars stud the sky.
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to set or scatter (objects) at intervals over an expanse or surface.
to stud raisins over a cake.
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to furnish with or support by studs.
adjective
noun
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a studhorse or stallion.
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an establishment, such as a farm, in which horses are kept for breeding.
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a number of horses, usually for racing or hunting, bred or kept by one owner.
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a male animal, such as a bull or ram, kept for breeding.
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a herd of animals kept for breeding.
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Slang.
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a man who is notably virile and sexually active.
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a handsome man with an attractive physique; a hunk.
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a young man.
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Poker. stud poker.
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a Black woman or girl, especially a lesbian, who embraces identity markers, such as clothing, hairstyle, interests, or behaviors that are associated with traditional expressions of masculinity.
Masculine women are my type so I've dated a lot of studs.
adjective
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of, associated with, or pertaining to a studhorse or studhorses.
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retained for breeding purposes.
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noting or relating to a Black woman or girl, especially a lesbian, who embraces identity markers, such as clothing, hairstyle, interests, or behaviors, that are associated with traditional expressions of masculinity; butch.
There's a lot of stud lesbians in the club tonight!
idioms
abbreviation
noun
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a large-headed nail or other projection protruding from a surface, usually as decoration
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a type of fastener consisting of two discs at either end of a short shank, used to fasten shirtfronts, collars, etc
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building trades a vertical member made of timber, steel, etc, that is used with others to construct the framework of a wall
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a headless bolt that is threaded at both ends, the centre portion being unthreaded
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any short projection on a machine, such as the metal cylinder that forms a journal for the gears on a screw-cutting lathe
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the crossbar in the centre of a link of a heavy chain
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one of a number of rounded projections on the sole of a boot or shoe to give better grip, as on a football boot
verb
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to provide, ornament, or make with studs
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to dot or cover (with)
the park was studded with daisies
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building trades to provide or support (a wall, partition, etc) with studs
noun
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a group of pedigree animals, esp horses, kept for breeding purposes
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any male animal kept principally for breeding purposes, esp a stallion
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a farm or stable where a stud is kept
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the state or condition of being kept for breeding purposes
at stud
put to stud
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(modifier) of or relating to such animals or the place where they are kept
a stud farm
a stud horse
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slang a virile or sexually active man
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short for stud poker
Other Word Forms
- unstudded adjective
Etymology
Origin of stud1
First recorded before 900; Middle English stod(e), stud(e), “upright post; ornamental knob,” Old English stod, studu “stake, post”; cognate with Middle High German stud, Old Norse stoth “pillar, post, support”
Origin of stud2
First recorded before 1000, and in 1920–25 stud 2 for def. 6; Middle English stod(e), stud(e), Old English stōd “a stud, herd of horses,” cognate with Old Norse stōth; akin to stand
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.