Used in a Sentence

stemming

Definitions, parts of speech, synonyms, and sentence examples for stemming.

Editorial note

This (the whole chain of comments stemming from this parent in parent) is as ridiculous as it is entertaining.

Examples15
Definitions4
Parts of speech1

Quick take

A process for removing the inflexional, and sometimes derivational, affixes from words.

Meaning at a glance

The clearest senses and uses of stemming gathered in one view.

noun

A process for removing the inflexional, and sometimes derivational, affixes from words.

noun

(by extension) To include a term's inflections as part of a search engine's search.

noun

(nautical) Movement against a current, especially a tidal current.

Definitions

Core meanings and parts of speech for stemming.

noun

A process for removing the inflexional, and sometimes derivational, affixes from words.

noun

(by extension) To include a term's inflections as part of a search engine's search.

noun

(nautical) Movement against a current, especially a tidal current.

noun

(climbing) The technique of bridging between two holds with hands and/or feet, applying forces to each in opposing directions in order to brace oneself in position.

Example sentences

1

This (the whole chain of comments stemming from this parent in parent) is as ridiculous as it is entertaining.

2

This is clearly a bug in Apple's internal policy stemming from an edge-case that wasn't considered while drafting it.

3

That would sidestep the problems stemming from decentralization and probably achieve some economies of scale too.

4

After the n-th drama stemming from the fact that Reddit as company is basically shit.

5

We have a financial inequality and mental health problem (somewhat stemming from said inequality) in this country, not a firearm problem.

6

It's a completely baseless fear stemming from our complete ignorance of what AI might be like - just utter science fiction.

7

Whether or not there are other underlying issues stemming from such misbehavior is irrelevant to the fact that the misbehavior exists.

8

It doesn't shield Congressmen from prosecution stemming from illegal acts performed while acting as Congressmen.

9

Prenda Law in particular has taken a beating, largely stemming from them attempting to defraud the court and refusing to comply with court orders.

10

Pure functional programming carries other burdens, too, some stemming from its conceptual roots in lambda calculus, like the lack of a clear complexity model.

11

It's the way to talk about passwords independent of encoding, since it talks only about their information theoretical content (stemming from the manner they were generated).

12

People refer to that as click-bait and there are many other forms of growing pains - some of them simply stemming from the fact that you can't please everyone.

Quote examples

1

I'm all for the type of quitting that this article talked about, but I doubt that "routine career failures recast as 'damsel in distress harassment', stemming from rather dubious claims" is what we should aim for.

2

>“In my view, her job was made more difficult because as a woman, she was particularly subject to the abuse stemming from the pockets of toxic misogyny in the Reddit ecosystem,” said Mr.

3

While I am not a C++ day-developer nor guru, from what I have seen and written of modern C++, the "move member variables" is not "good", in any sense of the word, stemming from the reasons put forth by many a comment.

Frequently asked questions

Short answers drawn from the clearest meanings and examples for this word.

How do you use stemming in a sentence?

This (the whole chain of comments stemming from this parent in parent) is as ridiculous as it is entertaining.

What does stemming mean?

A process for removing the inflexional, and sometimes derivational, affixes from words.

What part of speech is stemming?

stemming is commonly used as noun.