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stream
[streem]
noun
a body of water flowing in a channel or watercourse, as a river, rivulet, or brook.
a steady current in water, as in a river or the ocean.
to row against the stream;
the Gulf Stream.
any flow of water or other liquid or fluid.
streams of blood.
a current or flow of air, gas, or the like.
a beam or trail of light.
A stream of moonlight fell from the clouds.
a continuous flow or succession of anything.
a stream of words.
prevailing direction; drift.
the stream of opinion.
Digital Technology.
a flow of data, as an audio broadcast, a movie, or live video, transmitted smoothly and continuously from a source to a computer, mobile device, etc.
verb (used without object)
to flow, pass, or issue in a stream, as water, tears, or blood.
Synonyms: pourto send forth or throw off a stream; run or flow (often followed bywith ).
eyes streaming with tears.
to extend in a beam or in rays, as light.
Sunlight streamed in through the windows.
to move or proceed continuously like a flowing stream, as a procession.
to wave or float outward, as a flag in the wind.
to hang in a loose, flowing manner, as long hair.
verb (used with object)
to send forth or discharge in a stream.
The wound streamed blood.
to cause to stream or float outward, as a flag.
Digital Technology.
to transfer or transmit (data) in such a way that it is processed in a steady and continuous stream.
Internet service providers are talking about setting limits on the amount of data that can be streamed into your home.
Nautical., to place (an object) in the water at the end of a line attached to a vessel.
stream
/ striːm /
noun
a small river; brook
any steady flow of water or other fluid
something that resembles a stream in moving continuously in a line or particular direction
a rapid or unbroken flow of speech, etc
a stream of abuse
a flow of money into a business
a revenue stream
any of several parallel classes of schoolchildren, or divisions of children within a class, grouped together because of similar ability
to conform to the accepted standards
(of an industrial plant, manufacturing process, etc) shut down or not in production
(of an industrial plant, manufacturing process, etc) in or about to go into operation or production
available or in existence
verb
to emit or be emitted in a continuous flow
his nose streamed blood
(intr) to move in unbroken succession, as a crowd of people, vehicles, etc
(intr) to float freely or with a waving motion
bunting streamed in the wind
(tr) to unfurl (a flag, etc)
(intr) to move causing a trail of light, condensed gas, etc, as a jet aircraft
mining to wash (earth, gravel, etc) in running water in prospecting (for gold, etc), to expose the particles of ore or metal
education to group or divide (children) in streams
stream
A flow of water in a channel or bed, as a brook, rivulet, or small river.
A flow of a watery substance, such as blood in blood vessels or cytoplasm in fungal hyphae, in an organism or in part of an organism.
Other Word Forms
- streamless adjective
- streamlike adjective
- interstream adjective
- outstream verb (used with object)
- understream noun
- streamlet noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of stream1
Idioms and Phrases
on stream, in or into operation.
The factory will be on stream in a month.
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
And it’s not just cartoonists who are losing their jobs; legacy print media has become a dinosaur in the digital age, when news is presented in a constant stream, not a cycle.
The game will be streamed live on YouTube nationally for free and will be broadcast on NBC in the Los Angeles area.
There have also been a steady stream of aftershocks.
For her book launch earlier this week, hundreds packed into the cavernous women's college auditorium in Kochi - fittingly called the Mother Mary Hall - with an overflow crowd watching on a live stream outside.
When Netflix and other streaming giants found themselves in need of more cash, they cracked down on viewers who shared passwords.
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When To Use
A stream is a small river, a continuous flow, or a flow of data over the internet. Stream has several other senses as a noun and a verb.Like a river, a stream is a body of water that flows from one source and ends by emptying into a larger body of water or a water basin. When it comes to rivers and streams, there is no official measurement used to separate them. Generally, a stream is considered to be smaller than a river, but even official organizations concerned with geography sometimes use both terms to refer to the same body of water.
- Real-life examples: The United States has millions of miles of streams. Streams play an important part in nature because they deliver water or offer shelter to plants, fish, and other aquatic animals. You might have a stream near you that is home to fish or other aquatic life.
- Used in a sentence: We saw a small fish jump out of the stream.
- Real-life examples: A stream of tears might flow out of your eyes if you hit your thumb with a hammer. You might hear about a stream of wind during a weather forecast. Department stores often get a stream of customers during the holidays.
- Used in a sentence: Luckily, the doctor quickly stopped the stream of blood coming from my leg.
- Used in a sentence: Milk streamed from the vats into the chocolate-making machinery.
- Real-life examples: Netflix, YouTube, and Twitch allow people to watch streams of videos, while Spotify and Amazon Music offer music streams.
- Used in a sentence: We watched a stream of the movie on my laptop.
- Used in a sentence: I told her not to illegally stream music but she wouldn’t listen.
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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