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Stam

STAM can refer to:

  • Ghent City Museum (in Dutch: Stadsmuseum Gent)
  • Signal transducing adaptor molecule, a human gene
  • Science and Technology of Advanced Materials, an open access journal in materials science
  • Sparse totally anti-magic square, a type of Antimagic square
  • UGM-89 Perseus, a cancelled U.S. Navy submarine-launched anti-ship and anti-submarine guided missile system known as Submarine TActical Missile
  • Surface-to-air missile, otherwise spelt as Surface To Air Missile

Stam can refer to:

  • Stam (surname)
  • Chocolaterie Stam in the Netherlands and the Midwestern United States
  • Ktav Stam, Jewish traditional writing
  • Sofer stam, a scribe of Jewish religious books
Stam (surname)

Stam is a Dutch surname that may refer to

  • Caroline Stam, Dutch classical soprano
  • Cees Stam (born 1935), one of many pseudonyms of Hugo Brandt Corstius, Dutch author
  • Cees Stam (born 1945), Dutch cyclist
  • Danny Stam (born 1972), Dutch cyclist, son of Cees
  • Debby Stam (born 1984), Dutch volleyball player
  • Hans Stam (1919–1996), Dutch water polo player
  • Jaap Stam (born 1972), Dutch footballer
  • Jessica Stam (born 1986), Canadian model
  • Jos Stam, Dutch-born computer graphics specialist
  • Katie Stam (born 1986), American beauty queen and Miss America 2009
  • Koen Stam (born 1987), Dutch footballer
  • Marieke Stam (born 1961), retired Dutch speed skater
  • Mart Stam (1889–1986), Dutch architect
  • Neil Stam, (born 1942), American footballer
  • Paul Stam (born 1950), American politician
  • Robert Stam, American film theorist
  • Ron Stam (born 1984), Dutch footballer
  • Stefan Stam (born 1979), Dutch footballer

Usage examples of "stam".

Here, where Black Michael and young Rupert of Hentzau had admired dead boars, drunk too much claret, boasted about their horses, their stalking prowess and their shooting eyes, and planned the abduction of village beauties, Stam had lived, gently pottering about, for ten years.

Van der Valk did his best not to let Stam sink into the quicksand of bureaucracy.

When Stam had entered the army as a very young officer, the baron had been his commanding officer.

Valk went off with a feeling that he had been scrutinised a lot more closely than Stam was likely to be.

A report from Venlo had told him that Stam had crossed the frontier station here, known as the Keulse Barrier, every week for some years, perfectly openly.

And that had made it the more unlikely to his mind that Stam was a smuggler.

He had formed a theory about Stam, which he now proposed to go and test.

What on earth could Stam want with a filing-cabinet, when he could keep his business in a row of diaries on a shelf?

He had no idea still why Meinard Stam should have bought a white Mercedes or a house in Amsterdam.

When he had met the baron, and given the name of Stam, it must have been a shock to realise that here was someone who could pierce his alias, but the baron, already old, forgetful, and capricious, had not recalled the features of a man who had been a very young officer when he was already a colonel.

Find some evidence that puts her in touch with Stam, on Dutch soil, and you can have all the mandates you please.

And he certainly had no certainty, moral or otherwise, that Stam had been killed after a fight over loot.

There was no reason why Meinard Stam, retired army officer, sportsman and nature lover, should not become interested in a young woman.

When Stam paused outside the window to see if she was there, he stopped to look at her, to satisfy himself that he had not misjudged.

Perhaps on some potato-field between Stuttgart and Pforzheim there is a man still who knows that Stam is dead.