unstuckun‧stuck /ˌʌnˈstʌk◂/ adjective - A bit too ambitious, that lad, he'd like to see me come unstuck.
- Another day we nearly came unstuck altogether.
- Because many skiers rely on skidding, they come unstuck in deep snow.
- However, everyone comes unstuck once in a while, especially when caught unawares.
- I think he'd tried to make a certain birdie but he'd really come unstuck.
- Take this with you in the car on the day and you shouldn't come unstuck.
- The expensive, complex hybrid will come unstuck.
► come unstuck- Another day we nearly came unstuck altogether.
- Because many skiers rely on skidding, they come unstuck in deep snow.
- Billy says that he first came unstuck in time in 1944, long before his trip to Tralfamadore.
- But even that achievement is now in danger of coming unstuck, as Larry Elliott points out on page 12.
- He told about having come unstuck in time.
- The layers of secrecy have come unstuck with time.
- This week, however, they came unstuck.
- Where I really came unstuck arguing with von Kranksch was on the subject of crystals.
adjectivestickystuckunstucknon-sticknounstickerstickinessverbstick