stalk
stalk /st'ɔːk/ (stalks stalking stalked)
1 [N-COUNT] usu with supp
The stalk of a flower, leaf, or fruit is the thin part that joins it to the plant or tree.
A single pale blue flower grows up from each joint on a long stalk.
...corn stalks.
= stem
2 [VERB] V n
If you stalk a person or a wild animal, you follow them quietly in order to kill them, catch them, or observe them carefully.
He stalks his victims like a hunter after a deer.
= track
3 [VERB] V n
If someone stalks someone else, especially a famous person or a person they used to have a relationship with, they keep following them or contacting them in an annoying and frightening way.
Even after their divorce he continued to stalk and threaten her.
● stalking [N-UNCOUNT]
The Home Secretary is considering a new law against stalking.
4 [VERB] V adv/prep
If you stalk somewhere, you walk there in a stiff, proud, or angry way.
If his patience is tried at meetings he has been known to stalk out.
1 [N-COUNT] usu with supp
The stalk of a flower, leaf, or fruit is the thin part that joins it to the plant or tree.
A single pale blue flower grows up from each joint on a long stalk.
...corn stalks.
= stem
2 [VERB] V n
If you stalk a person or a wild animal, you follow them quietly in order to kill them, catch them, or observe them carefully.
He stalks his victims like a hunter after a deer.
= track
3 [VERB] V n
If someone stalks someone else, especially a famous person or a person they used to have a relationship with, they keep following them or contacting them in an annoying and frightening way.
Even after their divorce he continued to stalk and threaten her.
● stalking [N-UNCOUNT]
The Home Secretary is considering a new law against stalking.
4 [VERB] V adv/prep
If you stalk somewhere, you walk there in a stiff, proud, or angry way.
If his patience is tried at meetings he has been known to stalk out.