stake1

[steyk] /steɪk/
noun
1.
a stick or post pointed at one end for driving into the ground as a boundary mark, part of a fence, support for a plant, etc.
2.
a post to which a person is bound for execution, usually by burning.
3.
the stake, the punishment of death by burning:
Joan of Arc was sentenced to the stake.
4.
one of a number of vertical posts fitting into sockets or staples on the edge of the platform of a truck or other vehicle, as to retain the load.
5.
Mormon Church. a division of ecclesiastical territory, consisting of a number of wards presided over by a president and two counselors.
6.
sett (def 2).
verb (used with object), staked, staking.
7.
to mark with or as if with stakes (often followed by off or out):
We staked out the boundaries of the garden.
8.
to possess, claim, or reserve a share of (land, profit, glory, etc.) as if by marking or bounding with stakes (usually followed by out or off):
I'm staking out ten percent of the profit for myself.
9.
to separate or close off by a barrier of stakes.
10.
to support with a stake or stakes, as a plant:
to stake tomato vines.
11.
to tether or secure to a stake, as an animal:
They staked the goat in the back yard.
12.
to fasten with a stake or stakes.
Verb phrases
13.
stake out,
  1. to keep (a suspect) under police surveillance.
  2. to appoint (a police officer) to maintain constant watch over a suspect or place.
Idioms
14.
pull up stakes, Informal. to leave one's job, place of residence, etc.; move:
They pulled up stakes and went to California.
Origin
before 900; (noun) Middle English; Old English staca pin; cognate with Dutch staak, German Stake, Old Norse -staki (in lȳsistaki candlestick); akin to stick1; (v.) Middle English staken to mark (land) with stakes, derivative of the noun
Synonyms
1. pale, picket, pike.
British Dictionary definitions for pull up stakes

stake1

/steɪk/
noun
1.
a stick or metal bar driven into the ground as a marker, part of a fence, support for a plant, etc
2.
one of a number of vertical posts that fit into sockets around a flat truck or railway wagon to hold the load in place
3.
a method or the practice of executing a person by binding him to a stake in the centre of a pile of wood that is then set on fire
4.
(Mormon Church) an administrative district consisting of a group of wards under the jurisdiction of a president
5.
pull up stakes, to leave one's home or temporary resting place and move on
verb (transitive)
6.
to tie, fasten, or tether with or to a stake
7.
often foll by out or off. to fence or surround with stakes
8.
(often foll by out) to lay (a claim) to land, rights, etc
9.
to support with a stake
Word Origin
Old English staca pin; related to Old Frisian staka, Old High German stehho, Old Norse stjaki; see stick1

stake2

/steɪk/
noun
1.
the money or valuables that a player must hazard in order to buy into a gambling game or make a bet
2.
an interest, often financial, held in something: a stake in the company's future
3.
(often pl) the money that a player has available for gambling
4.
(often pl) a prize in a race, etc, esp one made up of contributions from contestants or owners
5.
(pl) (horse racing) a race in which all owners of competing horses contribute to the prize money
6.
(US & Canadian, informal) short for grubstake (sense 1)
7.
at stake, at risk: two lives are at stake
8.
raise the stakes
  1. to increase the amount of money or valuables hazarded in a gambling game
  2. to increase the costs, risks, or considerations involved in taking an action or reaching a conclusion: the Libyan allegations raised the stakes in the propaganda war between Libya and the United States
verb (transitive)
9.
to hazard (money, etc) on a result
10.
to invest in or support by supplying with money, etc: to stake a business enterprise
Word Origin
C16: of uncertain origin
Word Origin and History for pull up stakes

stake

n.

"pointed stick or post," Old English staca, from Proto-Germanic *stakon (cf. Old Norse stiaki, Dutch staak, German stake), from PIE root *steg- "pole, stick." The Germanic word has been borrowed in Spanish (estaca), Old French (estaque), and Italian stacca) and was borrowed back as attach. Meaning "post upon which persons were bound for death by burning" is recorded from c.1200. Stake-body as a type of truck is attested from 1907. In pull up stakes, "The allusion is to pulling up the stakes of a tent" [Bartlett].

"that which is placed at hazard," 1530s, from stake (v.). Plural stakes, as in horse racing, first recorded 1690s (cf. sweepstakes). To have a stake in is recorded from 1784.

v.

early 14c., "to mark (land) with stakes," from stake (n.1). Hence, to stake a claim (1857). Meaning "to risk, wager" is attested from 1520s, probably from notion of "post on which a gambling wager was placed," though Weekley suggests "there is a tinge of the burning or baiting metaphor" in this usage. Meaning "to maintain surveilance" (usually stake out) is first recorded 1942, American English colloquial, probably form earlier sense of "mark off territory." Related: Staked; staking.

Slang definitions & phrases for pull up stakes

pull up stakes

verb phrase

To depart; decamp: If things don't get better we'll pull up stakes (1817+)


stake

Related Terms

grubstake


Idioms and Phrases with pull up stakes

pull up stakes

Move away, leave one's home, job, or country. For example, We've lived here for years, but now it's time to pull up stakes. This expression alludes to the stakes that mark property boundaries. [ Early 1800s ]