stack
noun /stæk/
/stæk/
Idioms - [countable] stack (of something) a pile of something, usually neatly arranged
- a stack of books
- She added her tray to the stack.
Extra Examples- She brought us a stack of pancakes covered with syrup.
- There was a towering stack of containers ready to be loaded onto the ship.
- [countable] stack (of something) (informal, especially British English) a large number or amount of something; a lot of something
- stacks of money
- There's a stack of unopened mail waiting for you at the house.
- I've got stacks of work to do.
- [countable] a tall chimney, especially on a factory see also chimney stack, smokestack
- the stacks[plural] the part of a library, sometimes not open to the public, where books that are not often needed are stored
- The books you need will have to be brought up from the stacks.
- [countable] (computing) a way of storing information in a computer in which the most recently stored item is the first to be retrieved (= found or got back)Topics Computersc2
- [countable] (geology) a tall thin part of a cliff that has been separated from the land and stands on its own in the sea
Word OriginMiddle English: from Old Norse stakkr ‘haystack’, of Germanic origin.
Idioms
blow your top
(North American English also blow your stack)
- (informal) to get very angry