up a stump

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English[edit]

Prepositional phrase[edit]

up a stump

  1. (informal) At a loss, puzzled, in a bind.
    • 1892, Mark Twain, Meisterschaft: In Three Acts, act II, scene I, page 181:
      GEO. Why it's got to. Suppose we wandered out of it and took a chance at the language on our own responsibility, where the nation would we be? Up a stump, that's where. Our only safety is in sticking like wax to the text.
    • 1984, Robert W. Creamer, Stengel: His Life and Times, Bison Books, published 1996, →ISBN, page 67:
      Manager Dahlen said that Callahan and Stengel were so evenly matched that he was "up a stump" trying to pick between them.
    • 1996, Mendel Mokher Sefarim, Dan Miron, & Ken Frieden, Tales of Mendele the Book Peddler, Fishke the Lame and Benjamin the Third, Schocken Books, →ISBN, page 243:
      Whereas your ordinary middle-ranking persons, they never had the least notion of what it was, so naturally they were up a stump every time they come across it, you see.
    • 2009, Kent Freeland, A Street Called Darwin, iUniverse, →ISBN, page 54:
      In fact, Darwin was unable to decide on a suitable present, telling his roommate that he was up a stump about what to get for his sister and new brother-in-law.