Stops in a sentence as a noun

" "Oh, okay, I'll talk to him and make sure it stops.

With a bunch of this, he stops and calls up Tesla.

There are a bunch of full stops near 400 miles, but remember, he thinks that full stops are good.

The sensors are right, the tech support was misguided, the car stops and needs to be towed.

But this stops being a question of pay, or even "work": after all, I'm happy to spend hours and hours programming for free.

Probably when the NSA stops illegally spying on the citizens it is supposed to serve.

Drivers are to be advised that they can refuse a search, and dogs will no longer be used in conducting traffic stops.

Your shitty company brought this upon itself and there is nothing to discuss until it stops being the NSA's *****.

I do not see a case where this happened, but if true would obviously be a critical bug.> 4. Replication just stops sometimes, without error.

Also, asset forfeiture revenue from traffic stops must be donated to non-profit organizations, or used to pay for the officer training required by the settlement.

If you drop it to 50 at night or in the middle of the day, the heater stops working, but then when the time comes to warm the house again, the heater has to work at full power for a long time to get the temp back up - thus losing a lot of your savings.

Many newer suburbs are being built with walkability in mind, usually with a small commercial core with groceries, a coffee shop, laundry and a few restaurants, many have mass transit shuttle stops and commuter lots nearby and with telecommuting becoming more common, there's less of a need to make the daily drive.

The people in charge don't care if twelve undergrads lost their eyesight debugging the code, and it stops working if the lab door is shut too loudly.- I learned that if I just wrote my software in the proper language, in the proper way, and didn't tell anybody I was doing it that way, everything worked out extremely well.

Stops definitions

noun

a gambling card game in which chips are placed on the ace and king and queen and jack of separate suits (taken from a separate deck); a player plays the lowest card of a suit in his hand and successively higher cards are played until the sequence stops; the player who plays a card matching one in the layout wins all the chips on that card

See also: Michigan Chicago Newmarket boodle