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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
standstill
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
virtual
▪ From a virtual standstill he jumped over.
▪ And bringing an already faltering economy to its knees, transport workers brought the country to a virtual standstill in December.
▪ The economy comes to a virtual standstill as the population is forced to turn to print and writing for communication purposes.
▪ Sinn Fein is excluded from peace talks that are now at a virtual standstill.
■ VERB
bring
▪ Read in studio Finally, traffic on a busy road was brought to a standstill this afternoon ... by a train.
▪ Retailers, home sellers and transportation companies from airlines to freight haulers saw activity brought to a standstill in the blizzard.
▪ If the electric power could be cut, industry everywhere would be brought to a standstill.
▪ The South Metropolitan tramways were not brought completely to a standstill and Sutton depôt kept cars on the road.
▪ The blizzard that brought Washington to a standstill extended the blackout for several more days.
▪ So many people attended his funeral in Cheltenham, that the town was brought to a standstill.
▪ Traffic was brought to a standstill on a busy stretch of the M-one today after cars and lorries became stuck in tar.
come
▪ Business and legislation came to a standstill.
▪ You might fill half a page or a dozen pages before you come to a standstill.
▪ For the first time in memory the ice bridge had come to a sudden standstill.
▪ Time has come to a standstill.
▪ The sun has come to a standstill, hours above the river and the opposite shore.
▪ Life on the island was in danger of coming to a standstill.
▪ The carriage came to a standstill as George was forced to stop for the flesh buyers blocking the way.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ And bringing an already faltering economy to its knees, transport workers brought the country to a virtual standstill in December.
▪ If the electric power could be cut, industry everywhere would be brought to a standstill.
▪ Retailers, home sellers and transportation companies from airlines to freight haulers saw activity brought to a standstill in the blizzard.
▪ Sinn Fein is excluded from peace talks that are now at a virtual standstill.
▪ So many people attended his funeral in Cheltenham, that the town was brought to a standstill.
▪ When Hardin did arrive at the capital world, it was to find all normal business at an absolute standstill.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Standstill

Standstill \Stand"still`\ (-st[i^]l`), n. A standing without moving forward or backward; a stop; a state of rest.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
standstill

"state of cessation of movement," 1702, from stand (v.) + still (adv.). Earlier the notion would have been expressed simply by stand.

Wiktionary
standstill

n. complete immobility; halt

WordNet
standstill
  1. n. a situation in which no progress can be made or no advancement is possible; "reached an impasse on the negotiations" [syn: deadlock, dead end, impasse, stalemate]

  2. an interruption of normal activity [syn: stand, tie-up]

Wikipedia
Standstill

A standstill is a situation of no movement or activity. See:

  • Lunar standstill, a time at which the range of the Moon's declination is at a maximum or minimum.
  • Standstill (band), a Spanish post-hardcore-band.
  • Standstill (bicycle), a technique used by bicycle riders.
  • Standstill agreement, an instrument of a hostile takeover defence.
  • Standstill operation, a surgical procedure that involves cooling the patient's body and stopping blood circulation.
Standstill (band)

Standstill is a Spanish post-hardcore-band from Barcelona, formed in 1995.

Outside of Spain, most of their albums were published by Defiance Records. In Spain, the band's label used to be BCore Disc until they decided to go fully DIY with 2006's Vivalaguerra.

Usage examples of "standstill".

He had a nasty moment or two as the machine bumped over the snow-covered tussocks and molehills with which the pasture was plentifully besprinkled, but kicking on right rudder just before the Camel ran to a standstill he managed to swerve so that it stopped not far from the low hedge which divided the field from the paddock.

Yezda surge almost sent Marcus hurrying back with his maniple to relieve the pressure on the rest of the legionaries, but Gaius Philippus and Gagik Bagratouni battled the nomads to a standstill.

As I was barred from the morgue and persona non grata with my colleagues, further research into the foot was at a standstill.

That implies that trade in the eastern Overdark is just about at a standstill, or at least relegated to the coastal trade.

As usual he was riding just ahead of Jim, breaking trail and scanning ahead for sign, when suddenly he turned Crow aside and reined him to a standstill.

The revitalized presidential army won a lot of popular support and fought the usurpers to a standstill.

The great raids on Schweinfurt, for example, designed to deprive German vehicles of ball bearings and thus bring their army to a standstill, caused some destruction and problems, but they were carried out at great risk and high cost and still hardly slowed Germany down.

Sab glided off his perch and arrowed down, down through the house, through a rising cloud of plaster dust, down to the great hall, where he landed, skidded inelegantly on his slippy talons and, recovering his balance, came to a standstill beside Latch.

Moreover, the spot on which we had been so suddenly brought to a standstill was relatively high and unsheltered, and the night wind blew swiftly and cold.

I turned the Land Rover into the lane to the cottage, and bumped Buttonhook to a standstill on the rough ground behind the bushes beyond the building.

The reason I prefer to use a portion of the cabbage food in the form of manure, is, that I have noticed that when the attempt is made to raise the larger drumhead varieties on fertilizers only, the cabbages, just as the heads are well formed, are apt to come nearly to a standstill.

Everything else came to a standstill, the steelworkers swearing solidarity with the railroad men until the Pennsylvania canceled its wage cuts.

When left to itself, the process of fermentation in most of these sugary or starchy liquids will come to a standstill after a while, because the alcohol, when it reaches a certain strength in the liquid, is, like all other toxins, or poisons produced by germs, a poison also to the germ that produces it.

As the Hispano was brought to a standstill, a tall, thin man left the group and came over to De Richleau.

After walking for twenty minutes, the four castaways were suddenly brought to a standstill by the sight of foaming billows close to their feet.