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ALL meanings of stacked

stacked
S s
  • noun stacked Often, stacks. a set of shelves for books or other materials ranged compactly one above the other, as in a library. 1
  • noun stacked stacks, the area or part of a library in which the books and other holdings are stored or kept. 1
  • noun stacked a number of chimneys or flues grouped together. 1
  • abbreviation STACKED smokestack. 1
  • noun stacked a vertical duct for conveying warm air from a leader to a register on an upper story of a building. 1
  • noun stacked a vertical waste pipe or vent pipe serving a number of floors. 1
  • noun stacked Informal. a great quantity or number. 1
  • noun stacked Radio. an antenna consisting of a number of components connected in a substantially vertical series. 1
  • noun stacked Computers. a linear list arranged so that the last item stored is the first item retrieved. 1
  • noun stacked Military. a conical, free-standing group of three rifles placed on their butts and hooked together with stacking swivels. 1
  • noun stacked Also called air stack, stackup. Aviation. a group of airplanes circling over an airport awaiting their turns to land. 1
  • noun stacked an English measure for coal and wood, equal to 108 cubic feet (3 cu. m). 1
  • noun stacked Geology. a column of rock isolated from a shore by the action of waves. 1
  • noun stacked Games. a given quantity of chips that can be bought at one time, as in poker or other gambling games. the quantity of chips held by a player at a given point in a gambling game. 1
  • verb with object stacked to pile, arrange, or place in a stack: to stack hay; to stack rifles. 1
  • verb with object stacked to cover or load with something in stacks or piles. 1
  • verb with object stacked to arrange or select unfairly in order to force a desired result, especially to load (a jury, committee, etc.) with members having a biased viewpoint: The lawyer charged that the jury had been stacked against his client. 1
  • verb with object stacked to keep (a number of incoming airplanes) flying nearly circular patterns at various altitudes over an airport where crowded runways, a low ceiling, or other temporary conditions prevent immediate landings. 1
  • verb without object stacked to be arranged in or form a stack: These chairs stack easily. 1
  • idioms stacked blow one's stack, Slang. to lose one's temper or become uncontrollably angry, especially to display one's fury, as by shouting: When he came in and saw the mess he blew his stack. 1
  • idioms stacked stack the deck, to arrange cards or a pack of cards so as to cheat: He stacked the deck and won every hand. to manipulate events, information, etc., especially unethically, in order to achieve an advantage or desired result. 1
  • adjective stacked (of a woman) having a voluptuous figure. 1
  • noun stacked a more or less orderly pile or heap: a precariously balanced stack of books; a neat stack of papers. 1
  • noun stacked a large, usually conical, circular, or rectangular pile of hay, straw, or the like. 1
  • adjective stacked If a place or surface is stacked with objects, it is filled with piles of them. 0
  • adjective stacked having a full, shapely figure; curvaceous 0
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