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View synonyms for

stood

[stood]

verb

  1. the simple past tense and past participle of stand.



stood

/ ʊ /

verb

  1. the past tense and past participle of stand

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Idioms and Phrases

see should have stood in bed.
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

While playing Bree on “The Waterfront,” she worked on some of the same soundstages that once housed the “Dawson’s” sets and stood on the very sites where iconic “Dawson’s” moments once occurred.

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He stood calmly in front of the quiet City Hall, holding up a Mexican flag, representing his mother’s birthplace.

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In March this year, the Olympic champion stood in a courtroom in his native Norway and claimed he had been subjected to a decade of physical and mental abuse by his father.

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Mr Spencer stood in the dock to confirm his name as Michael Patrick Spencer and his date of birth.

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A person stood in the open hatch wearing fatigues, a helmet and what they said appeared to be body armor.

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When To Use

is a basic definition ofstood?

Stood is the past tense and past participle of the verb stand. Stood can mean to be positioned upright (in the past), to not move or budge (in the past), or to believe in something (in the past). Stood, like stand, has many other senses as a verb. As the past tense of stand, stood is used in many of the same idioms.If someone stood somewhere, it means they were in an upright position at that location and not sitting or lying down. If an object stood somewhere, it was located there and hadn’t yet collapsed, fell down, or been moved somewhere else.



  • Real-life examples: The Colossus of Rhodes stood at a Greek harbor before collapsing during an earthquake. Archaeologists may find evidence of a building that once stood somewhere in the past but has since been destroyed.


  • Used in a sentence: I stood by the door and waited for the mailman. 


Stood can also mean that someone or an animal rose from a sitting, lying, or squatting position. This sense is often followed by up.



  • Used in a sentence: Larry slowly stood up out of his chair to greet his son.  


In a similar sense, stood can be used to mean that something was a certain height if positioned fully upright.



  • Used in a sentence: I swear that the King Kong statue stood over 100 feet tall! 


Stood can also mean to have not moved or given any ground.



  • Used in a sentence: I stood firm against the volley of snowballs. 


Stood can also mean to believe in something. This sense is often followed by the word for.



  • Used in a sentence: I try to live up to my mother’s legacy and follow the values she stood for. 


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Stony Pointstooge