stop up
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English
[edit]Verb
[edit]stop up (third-person singular simple present stops up, present participle stopping up, simple past and past participle stopped up)
- To fill a hole or cavity, or block (an opening or passage), as with a plug.
- 1885, Mark Twain, chapter 37, in Huckleberry Finn:
- So then we […] scratched around and found an old tin washpan, and stopped up the holes as well as we could.
- (UK, law) To permanently close or block (a road or path); to legally extinguish a right of way.
- (photography) To increase the aperture of a photographic lens, moving from an f/stop represented by a higher number to an f/stop represented by a lower number and causing more light to pass into the camera.
Antonyms
[edit]- (antonym(s) of “increase the aperture of a photographic lens”): stop down
Translations
[edit]to fill a hole or block an opening or passage