stem the tide/flow/flood of something• Church had effectively stemmed the flood ofartists.• Through this conservative normativist theoryDiceyattempted to stem the tide of government growth in a collectivist direction.• Both the Senate and the administration seemed powerless to stem the tide ofhysteria.• This illustrates the type of practical public health action that could be taken to stem the tide ofobesity.• Then she dropped her face into her hands, unable to stem the flood oftears a second longer.• She stemmed the flow of tears that came, knowing they would sting his body.• After the game Kasparov said that Karpov had to play 24 ... d3 to stem the flow of the White attack.
STEMn /stem/
n1.the abbreviation of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics, used especially when talking about education
Originstem1
Old Englishstefn, stemn
stem2
(1200-1300)Old Norsestemma. stem from (1900-2000) From → STEM1