The cashier came up short ten dollars on his morning shift.
12. adj. Deficient; less; not coming up to a measure or standard.
an account which is short of the truth
13. adj. (obsolete) Not distant in time; near at hand.
14. adj. Being in a financial investment position that is structured to be profitable if the price of the underlying security declines in the future.
I'm short General Motors because I think their sales are plunging.
15. adv. Abruptly, curtly, briefly.
They had to stop short to avoid hitting the dog in the street.
He cut me short repeatedly in the meeting.
The boss got a message and cut the meeting short.
16. adv. Unawares.
The recent developments at work caught them short.
17. adv. Without achieving a goal or requirement.
His speech fell short of what was expected.
18. adv. (cricket, of the manner of bounce of a cricket ball) Relatively far from the batsman and hence bouncing higher than normal; opposite of full.
19. adv. (finance) With a negative ownership position.
We went short most finance companies in July.
20. subst. A short circuit.
21. subst. A short film.
22. subst. Used to indicate a short-length version of a size
38 short suits fit me right off the rack.
Do you have that size in a short.
23. subst. (baseball) A shortstop.
Jones smashes a grounder between third and short.
24. subst. (finance) A short seller.
The market decline was terrible, but the shorts were buying champagne.
25. subst. (finance) A short sale.
He closed out his short at a modest loss after three months.
26. subst. A summary account.
27. subst. (phonetics) A short sound, syllable, or vowel.
28. subst. (programming) An integer variable shorter than normal integers; usually two bytes long.
29. v. To cause a short circuit in (something).
30. v. (intransitive) Of an electrical circuit, to short circuit.
31. v. To shortchange.
32. v. To provide with a smaller than agreed or labeled amount.
This is the third time I've caught them shorting us.
33. v. (transitive, business) To sell something, especially securities, that one does not own at the moment for delivery at a later date in hopes of profiting from a decline in the price; to sell short.
34. v. (obsolete) To shorten.
35. prep. Deficient in.
We are short a few men on the second shift.
He's short common sense.
36. prep. (finance) Having a negative position in.
I don't want to be short the market going into the weekend.
3. adj. Occupying a small distance, area or spatial extent; short.
Her skirt was extremely brief but doubtless cool.
4. adj. (obsolete) Rife; common; prevalent.
5. subst. (legal) A writ summoning one to answer to any action.
6. subst. (legal) An answer to any action.
7. subst. (legal) A memorandum of points of fact or of law for use in conducting a case.
8. subst. (by extension, figurative) A position of interest or advocacy.
9. subst. (legal) An attorney's legal argument in written form for submission to a court.
10. subst. (English law) The material relevant to a case, delivered by a solicitor to the barrister who tries the case.
11. subst. A short news story or report.
12. subst. (usually plural) undershorts briefs.
I wear boxers under trousers but for sports I usually wear a brief.
13. subst. (obsolete) A summary, précis or epitome; an abridgement or abstract.
14. subst. (historical) A letter patent, from proper authority, authorizing a collection or charitable contribution of money in churches, for any public or private purpose.
15. subst. (slang) A ticket of any type.The Routledge Dictionary of Historical Slang
16. v. To summarize a recent development to some person with decision-making power.
The U.S. president was briefed on the military coup and its implications on African stability.
17. v. (transitive, legal) To write a legal argument and submit it to a court.
Unlike general lossless data compression algorithms, succinct data structures retain the ability to use them in-place, without decompressing them first.
3. adj. (archaic) wrapped by, or as if by a girdle; closely fitting, wound or wrapped or drawn up tightly.