stem+to+stem
41stem-and-leaf diagram — stem and leafˈ diagram noun (statistics) A type of diagram representing grouped data, in which class intervals are shown on a vertical line (the stem) with observations given beside each class interval on a horizontal line (a leaf) • • • Main… …
42stem christie — stem christie, = stem turn. (Cf. ↑stem turn) …
43stem|less — «STEHM lihs», adjective. having no stem, or having no visible stem …
44Stem — Stem, Steem Steem, v. i. To gleam. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] His head bald, that shone as any glass, . . . [And] stemed as a furnace of a leed [caldron]. Chaucer. [1913 Webster] …
45Stem — Stem, Steem Steem, n. A gleam of light; flame. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] …
46Stem — Stem, v. i. To move forward against an obstacle, as a vessel against a current. [1913 Webster] Stemming nightly toward the pole. Milton. [1913 Webster] …
47stem-end rot — /stem end /, Plant Pathol. a disease of fruits characterized by discoloration, shriveling, and decay of the stem and adjacent parts of the fruit and caused by any of several fungi of the genera Diplodia and Phomopsis. * * * …
48stem bromelain — stem bro·me·lain (stem broґmə lān) [EC 3.4.22.32] see bromelain …
49stem cell — stem ,cell noun count usually plural SCIENCE a cell that is taken from a person or animal at an early stage of development and is capable of developing into cells of any type, for example nerve cells or blood cells: Some scientists believe that… …
50stem — n. central stalk of a plant; petiole; slender part which connects or supports; main part of a word to which affixes are added (Grammar); family line of descent, ancestry v. arise, come from, originate; remove the stem from; stop, check, dam up;… …