
from stem to stern
[Middle English, from Old English stefn, stemn.]
SYNONYMS stem, arise, derive, emanate, flow, issue, originate, proceed, rise, spring. These verbs mean to come forth or come into being: customs that stem from the past; misery that arose from war; rights that derive from citizenship; disapproval that emanated from the teacher; happiness that flows from their friendship; prejudice that issues from fear; a proposal that originated in the Congress; a mistake that proceeded from carelessness; rebellion that rises in the provinces; new industries that spring up.

[Middle English stemmen, from Old Norse stemma.]
For more information on stem, visit Britannica.com.
The organ of vascular plants that usually develops branches and bears leaves and flowers. On woody stems a branch that is the current season's growth from a bud is called a twig. The stems of some species produce adventitious roots. See also Root (botany).
General characteristics
While most stems are erect, aerial structures, some remain underground, others creep over or lie prostrate on the surface of the ground, and still others are so short and inconspicuous that the plants are said to be stemless, or acaulescent. When stems lie flattened immediately above but not on the ground, with tips curved upward, they are said to be decumbent, as in juniper. If stems lie flat on the ground but do not root at the nodes (joints), the stem is called procumbent or prostrate, as in purslane. If a stem creeps along the ground, rooting at the nodes, it is said to be repent or creeping, as in ground ivy.
Most stems are cylindrical and tapering, appearing circular in cross section; others may be quadrangular or triangular.
Herbaceous stems (annuals and herbaceous perennials) die to the ground after blooming or at the end of the growing season. They usually contain little woody tissue. Woody stems (perennials) have considerable woody supporting tissue and live from year to year. A woody plant with no main stem or trunk, but usually with several stems developed from a common base at or near the ground, is known as a shrub.
External features
A shoot or branch usually consists of a stem, or axis, and leafy appendages. Stems have several distinguishing features. They arise either from the epicotyl of the embryo in a seed or from buds. The stem bears both leaves and buds at nodes, which are separated by leafless regions or internodes, and sometimes roots and flowers (see illustration).

Winter woody twig (horse chestnut) showing apical dominance. (After E. W. Sinnott and K. S. Wilson, Botany: Principles and Problems, 5th ed., McGraw-Hill, 1955)
The nodes are the regions of the primary stem where leaves and buds arise. The number of leaves at a node is usually specific for each plant species. In deciduous plants which are leafless during winter, the place of former attachment of a leaf is marked by the leaf scar. The scar is formed in part by the abscission zone formed at the base of the leaf petiole. The stem regions between nodes are called internodes. Internode length varies greatly among species, in different parts of the same stem, and under different growing conditions.
Lenticels are small, slightly raised or ridged regions of the stem surface that are composed of loosely arranged masses of cells in the bark. Their intercellular spaces are continuous with those in the interior of the stem, therefore permitting gas exchange similar to the stomata that are present before bark initiation.
There are three major types of stem branching: dichoto-mous, monopodial, and sympodial. Dichotomy occurs by a division of the apical meristem to form two new axes. If the terminal bud of an axis continues to grow and lateral buds grow out as branches, the branching is called monopodial. If the apical bud terminates growth in a flower or dies back and one or more axillary buds grow out, the branching is called sympodial. Often only one bud develops so that what appears to be single axis is in fact composed of a series of lateral branches arranged in linear sequence.
The large and conspicuous stems of trees and shrubs assume a wide variety of distinctive forms. Columnar stems are basically unbranched and form a terminal leaf cluster, as in palms, or lack obvious leaves, as in cacti. Branching stems have been classified either as excurrent, when there is a central trunk and a conical leaf crown, as in firs and other conifers, or as decur-rent (or deliquescent), when the trunk quickly divides up into many separate axes so that the crown lacks a central trunk, as in elm. See also Tree.
Internal features
The stem is composed of the three fundamental tissue systems that are found also in all other plant organs: the dermal (skin) system, consisting of epidermis in young stems and peridem in older stems of many species; the vascular (conducting) system, consisting of xylem (water conduction) and phloem (food conduction); and the fundamental or ground tissue system, consisting of parenchyma and sclerenchyma tissues in which the vascular tissues are embedded. The arrangement of the vascular tissues varies in stems of different groups of plants, but frequently these tissues form a hollow cylinder enclosing a region of ground tissue called pith and separated from the dermal tissue by another region of ground tissue called cortex. See also Cortex (plant); Epidermis (plant); Parenchyma; Phloem; Pith; Sclerenchyma; Xylem.
Part of the growth of the stem results from the activity of the apical meristem located at the tip of the shoot. The derivatives of this meristem are the primary tissues; epidermis, primary vascular tissues, and the ground tissues of the cortex and pith. In many species, especially those having woody stems, secondary tissues are added to the primary. These tissues are derived from the lateral meristems, oriented parallel with the sides of the stem: cork cambium (phellogen), which gives rise to the secondary protective tissue periderm, which consists of phellum (cork), phellogen (cork cambium), and phelloderm (secondary cortex) and which replaces the epidermis; and vascular cambium, which is inserted between the primary xylem and phloem and forms secondary xylem (wood) and phloem. See also Apical meristem; Lateral meristem.
The vascular tissues and the closely associated ground tissues—pericycle (on the outer boundary of vascular region), interfascicular regions (medullary or pith rays), and frequently also the pith—may be treated as a unit called the stele. The variations in the arrangement of the vascular tissues serve as a basis for distinguishing the stelar types. The word stele means column and thus characterizes the system of vascular and associated ground tissues as a column. This column is enclosed within the cortex, which is not part of the stele. See also Pericycle.
Idioms beginning with stem:
stem the tide
In addition to the idiom beginning with stem, also see from soup to nuts (stem to stern).
Definition: stalk of plant
Antonyms: root
v
Definition: come from
Antonyms: cause
v
Definition: prevent, stop
Antonyms: abet, aid, encourage, help
n. the main upright timber or metal piece at the bow of a ship, to which the ship's sides are joined.
v.(of a boat) make headway against (the tide or current).
from stem to stern from the front to the back, especially of a ship:
surges of water rocked their boats from stem to stern.See the Introduction, Abbreviations and Pronunciation for further details.
The main axis of a plant from which leaves and flowers grow. Stems can take many forms, from the trunk of a pine tree to the runners of a honeysuckle vine or the creeping rhizome of an iris.
Many of the insights of the saint stem from his experience as a sinner.
— Eric Hoffer
LearnThatWord.com is a free vocabulary and spelling program where you only pay for results!

| Skiing techniques |
|---|
| Stem Snowplough turn Stem Christie Parallel turn Carve turn Telemark turn Pivot turn |
The stem technique in skiing is a method for turning the skier. It is usually credited to the Austrian Mathias Zdarsky who developed it in the 1890s. Its variations gradually replaced the telemark technique in Alpine skiing.
The technique involves stemming the uphill ski. Stemming is pushing the tail of the ski outward—skidding it across snow—from a parallel position with the downhill ski to form a V shape where the tips of the skis are close together and the tails far apart. Initially the stemming ski has relatively little pressure applied—much less than half the skier's weight. After the ski is stemmed, most of the skiers weight is then transferred to initiate a change in direction.
The variations of the stem turn are:
These variants form the basis of the Austrian Arlberg Technique and instruction system developed by Johannes Schneider.
[1] http://www.mechanicsofsport.com/skiing/manoeuvres/stem_turn.html
[2] http://www.ski-jungle.com/better-skiing/ch2.htm#stem-turn
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
Dansk (Danish)
1.
n. - stilk, stamme, stængel, mundstykke, nodehals, stævn, forstavn
v. intr. - stamme fra
v. tr. - afstilke, stemme, vinde frem, arbejde sig op mod
idioms:
2.
v. tr. - opdæmme, stemme op, standse
v. intr. - stemme imod
idioms:
Nederlands (Dutch)
steel, steven, afstamming, stam, afdammen, tegengaan, afstammen van, ski naar buiten bewegen voor bocht of afremming
Français (French)
1.
n. - tige, queue, pied (de verre), tuyau (d'une plume), queue (de note), (Ling) radical, étrave
v. intr. - provenir de, être causé par
v. tr. - (Naut) avancer contre (marée), (Culin) équeuter
idioms:
2.
v. tr. - arrêter, (fig) enrayer, contenir (protestation), endiguer
v. intr. - faire un (virage) stem (en ski)
idioms:
Deutsch (German)
1.
n. - Stengel, Stiel, Stamm
v. - entstielen, entstengeln
idioms:
2.
v. - eindämmen, aufhalten, (entgegen)stemmen
idioms:
Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - κοτσάνι, μίσχος, στέλεχος, κουρδιστήρι (ρολογιού χειρός), γραμμή καταγωγής, πόδι/κολόνα ποτηριού, (γραμμ.) θέμα (λέξης), (ναυτ.) στείρα, κοράκι της πλώρης
v. - αναχαιτίζω, συγκρατώ, εκβλαστάνω, εκφύομαι, αφαιρώ τους μίσχους (από φυτό), εκπηγάζω, απορρέω, προκύπτω
idioms:
Italiano (Italian)
arginare, stelo, prua, radicale, radice, tema
idioms:
Português (Portuguese)
n. - talo (m)
v. - deter
idioms:
Русский (Russian)
ствол, стебель, стержень, плодоножка, род, линия родства, подставка, рукоятка, форштевень, происходить (от), запруживать, останавливать
idioms:
Español (Spanish)
1.
n. - tallo
v. intr. - provenir, derivar, nacer
v. tr. - desgranar, despalillar, quitar los pedúnculos, embestir por la proa, navegar contra la corriente
idioms:
2.
v. tr. - retener, contener, represar
v. intr. - detenerse, contenerse
idioms:
Svenska (Swedish)
n. - skaft, stäv, stam, släkt, plogåkning
v. - stämma, stoppa, sträva emot, bromsa gm plogåkning
中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
1. 茎, 柄, 干, 高脚酒杯的脚, 杆, 把, 烟斗柄, 起源于, 由...而造成, 抽去...的梗, 逆...而行, 给...装柄, 顶着...而上
idioms:
2. 堵住, 拦住, 把向内转, 阻挡, 遏止, 逆行
中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
1.
n. - 莖, 柄, 幹, 高腳酒杯的腳, 杆, 把, 煙斗柄
v. intr. - 起源於, 由...而造成
v. tr. - 抽去...的梗, 逆...而行, 給...裝柄, 頂著...而上
idioms:
2.
v. tr. - 堵住, 攔住, 把向內轉, 阻擋, 遏止
v. intr. - 堵住, 逆行
한국어 (Korean)
1.
n. - 줄기, 잎자루, 뱃머리
v. intr. - (사건이) 생기다, 일어나다, 유래하다
v. tr. - 줄기를 떼어내다
2.
v. tr. - 막다, 저지하다, 저항하다
v. intr. - (스키에서)제어하다
日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 茎, 果柄, 茎に似たもの, 軸, 船首材, 船首, 語幹, 血統, 花柄
v. - 茎を取り去る, 由来する, せき止める, 逆らって進む, 制動回転させる, 止まる
idioms:
العربيه (Arabic)
(الاسم) ساق النبات, عنق الكأس, , الجزء الأصلي لكلمه (فعل) نشأ عن, أوقف تدفق
עברית (Hebrew)
n. - גבעול, פטוטרת, קנה-הגביע, זרוע-המקטרת, שורש-מלה, קורת-החרטום, שושלת, תא לא מפותח (ביולוגיה), קו אנכי וצר (באות/תו)
v. intr. - נבע מ-, נגרם ע"י
v. tr. - הסיר גבעולים, השיט (ספינה) מול (גיאות או זרם)
v. tr. - הפסיק, סכר, חסם, הדף
v. intr. - היטה מגלש או מגלשיים כלפי חוץ כדי לפנות הצדה, להאט או לעצור את ההחלקה
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