These are the meanings of the letters NATSD when you unscramble them.
- Stand (n.)
To adhere to fixed principles; to maintain moral rectitude; to keep from falling into error or vice.
- Stand (n.)
To appear in court.
- Stand (n.)
To be at rest in an erect position; to be fixed in an upright or firm position
- Stand (n.)
To be consistent; to agree; to accord.
- Stand (n.)
To be in some particular state; to have essence or being; to be; to consist.
- Stand (n.)
To be or remain as it is; to continue in force; to have efficacy or validity; to abide.
- Stand (n.)
To be supported on the feet, in an erect or nearly erect position; -- opposed to lie, sit, kneel, etc.
- Stand (n.)
To cease from progress; not to proceed; to stop; to pause; to halt; to remain stationary.
- Stand (n.)
To continue upright in a certain locality, as a tree fixed by the roots, or a building resting on its foundation.
- Stand (n.)
To have or maintain a position, order, or rank; to be in a particular relation; as, Christian charity, or love, stands first in the rank of gifts.
- Stand (n.)
To hold a course at sea; as, to stand from the shore; to stand for the harbor.
- Stand (n.)
To maintain an invincible or permanent attitude; to be fixed, steady, or firm; to take a position in resistance or opposition.
- Stand (n.)
To maintain one's ground; to be acquitted; not to fail or yield; to be safe.
- Stand (n.)
To measure when erect on the feet.
- Stand (n.)
To occupy or hold a place; to have a situation; to be situated or located; as, Paris stands on the Seine.
- Stand (n.)
To offer one's self, or to be offered, as a candidate.
- Stand (n.)
To remain without ruin or injury; to hold good against tendencies to impair or injure; to be permanent; to endure; to last; hence, to find endurance, strength, or resources.
- Stand (n.)
To stagnate; not to flow; to be motionless.
- Stand (v. i.)
A halt or stop for the purpose of defense, resistance, or opposition; as, to come to, or to make, a stand.
- Stand (v. i.)
A place or post where one stands; a place where one may stand while observing or waiting for something.
- Stand (v. i.)
A place where a witness stands to testify in court.
- Stand (v. i.)
A raised platform or station where a race or other outdoor spectacle may be viewed; as, the judge's or the grand stand at a race course.
- Stand (v. i.)
A small table; also, something on or in which anything may be laid, hung, or placed upright; as, a hat stand; an umbrella stand; a music stand.
- Stand (v. i.)
A state of perplexity or embarrassment; as, to be at a stand what to do.
- Stand (v. i.)
A station in a city or town where carriages or wagons stand for hire; as, a cab stand.
- Stand (v. i.)
A weight of from two hundred and fifty to three hundred pounds, -- used in weighing pitch.
- Stand (v. i.)
A young tree, usually reserved when other trees are cut; also, a tree growing or standing upon its own root, in distinction from one produced from a scion set in a stock, either of the same or another kind of tree.
- Stand (v. i.)
Rank; post; station; standing.
- Stand (v. i.)
The act of standing.
- Stand (v. i.)
The situation of a shop, store, hotel, etc.; as, a good, bad, or convenient stand for business.
- Stand (v. t.)
To abide by; to submit to; to suffer.
- Stand (v. t.)
To be at the expense of; to pay for; as, to stand a treat.
- Stand (v. t.)
To endure; to sustain; to bear; as, I can not stand the cold or the heat.
- Stand (v. t.)
To resist, without yielding or receding; to withstand.
- Stand (v. t.)
To set upright; to cause to stand; as, to stand a book on the shelf; to stand a man on his feet.