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Dictionary
stump
noun
The remains of something that has been cut off; especially the remains of a tree, the remains of a limb.
Exact(12)
The magic marker helped us learn about field placements (sort of) and the late 80s saw the introduction of stump cam ("The older viewer, for the most part," noted Richie Benaud, "was close to apoplexy").
The voters' insurrection affected both those countries in financial meltdown and those having to stump up to bail them out and save the euro.
Emily Dickinson's winter is charged with wildness – the snow buries the "stump and stack and stem" and creates "Acres of seams where harvests were".
Our goal as a bowling unit was to try and hit the top of off stump which is the best place to bowl on that wicket".
Thankfully it was short-lived as Broad, who spent an hour off the field getting the ankle iced, returned to bowl without any apparent discomfort and took a wicket during the final session, knocking out the off stump of the home captain, Jacques Taylor.
On the stump, her maternal qualifications were always as important to her as her political positions.
The core of the game is stoic batting, watch your off stump, leave the ball.
To the southwest, Stane Street stretches downhill towards the white stump of Halnaker Windmill, and the dark grey spire of Chichester cathedral beyond.
Greece's creditors will not stump up any more cash until Athens sticks to bailout conditions that Varoufakis says would do just that.
But she also seemed to dismiss the attack – and the administration's handling of it – as a valid matter for public concern: In terms of the politicization of this... the entire reason that this has become the political topic it is, it's because of Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan, it's a big part of their stump speech, and it's reckless and irresponsible, what they're doing.
One can only assume that, on the verge of bankruptcy and with no qualms about misleading a public who had failed to stump up the cash to save his life's collection, Donovan turned his specimen into "the last Wolf" in the hope of a few extra quid.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com