Sticks & Stones Mac OS

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Examples of sticks in a Sentence

Sticks baseball does not define its success on wins and losses, but rather the improvement of the player, fundamental play and a true understanding of sportsmanship and teamwork. ‍ Sticks baseball will provide players the opportunity to play and train with one of the most competitive and best coached organizations in the country.

Online ordering menu for Stix. In the mood for Japanese cuisine straight of the teppanyaki grill? Or maybe you're looking for fresh sushi and delicious Mandarin dishes. Here at Stix we have all of the above, also available for carryout. Located near the corner of Collierville and S. Houston Levee Roads, inside the Carriage Crossing Mall. Hockey sticks can be purchased as one individual piece, or hockey stick blades can be purchased separate from shafts for customization purposes. Replacement hockey blades, shafts and sticks are produced by Bauer, CCM, Warrior, True, Easton, STX and more. Stick definition, a branch or shoot of a tree or shrub that has been cut or broken off.

  1. Sadie Weiner:

    As a potential shutdown creeps closer, we will see if Sen. Toomey sticks with his votes to defund Planned Parenthood or if he is so scared about his re-election that he flip-flops in a panic, these ads will highlight that Sen. Toomey and extremists in Congress are playing a dangerous game, and Pennsylvania families deserve better.

  2. Albert Einstein:

    I don't know how man will fight World War III, but I do know how they will fight World War IV with sticks and stones.

  3. The Economist:

    What is important is that the government sticks with the plan and manages the unrest as best they can while focusing on the bigger picture, austerity does not happen without pain.

  4. Walter Shaub:

    Theres not a history of disciplined speaking engagements where he sticks to a script.

  5. Mitch McConnell:

    The Democrats are barely even pretending to negotiate, the Speaker's latest spin is that it is some heroic sacrifice to lower The Democrats demand from a made-up $ 3.5 trillion marker that was never going to become law, to an equally made-up $ 2.5 trillion marker. The Democrats calls this meeting in the middle. That's not negotiating. That's throwing spaghetti at the wall to see what sticks.

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the sticks

The rural countryside, especially in a rustic or particularly unsophisticated area. Jane was sick of living in the sticks and dreamed of spending her life in New York City.What, are you embarrassed by your family from the sticks coming up to the big city to visit?
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms. © 2015 Farlex, Inc, all rights reserved.

stick

1. n. a baseball bat. (Baseball.) He holds the stick up higher than most batters.
Sticks & Stones Mac OS
2. n. a pool cue. He drew the stick back slowly, sighted again, and gave the cue ball a sharp knock.
3. n. a golf club. These aren’t my sticks, and you aren’t my caddy. What’s going on around here?
4. n. the lever that controls the horizontal and vertical surfaces of the tail of an aircraft. The pilot pulled back on the stick, and the plane did nothing—being that he hadn’t even started the engine or anything. You pull back on the stick, which lowers the tail and raises the nose, and up you go.
5. n. a gearshift lever in a car. (see also stick shift.) I keep reaching for the stick in a car with automatic.
6. n. a drunkard. (Possibly from dipstick, shitstick, or swizzle-stick.) Get that stick out of here before he makes a mess.
7. n. a person’s legs. (Always plural.) He’s got good sticks under him, but he won’t use them.

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8. and the sticksn. a rural or backwoods area. (Always with the in this sense and always plural.) You hear a lot about how things are in the sticks. They’re worse.
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

stick

to/byone's guns
To hold fast to an opinion or a set course of action.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
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