English edit

Etymology edit

stock +‎ take

Noun edit

stocktake (plural stocktakes)

  1. The process of making an inventory of stock in a store or other location.
    • 2009 January 8, “The Guardian: G2”, in The Guardian[1]:
      Patrick Barkham attends the annual stocktake at London Zoo, and things are getting confusing
  2. (British) The act or process of taking stock of something, or the result of that assessment.
    • 2000, George Eliot, Margaret Harris, Judith Johnston, The Journals of George Eliot, page 91:
      Of all GE's journals, this diary most closely documents her processes of composition, and the list of 'Order of Writings' in the front of the book (evidently written in 1876 or'7) provides a stocktake of her career.
    • 2009, Brendon Lancaster, Hoodie, page 32:
      Ben closed his eyes tightly for a quick stocktake of the situation as his heart and mind.
    • 2012, Nick Vaughan-Williams, Border Politics, page 38:
      Bordering practices that are seemingly at odds with the modern geopolitical imaginary, such as those explored in Chapter 1, demand a stocktake of what critical resources might be available for new ways of thinking about what borders are, where they come from, and what they do in contemporary political life.
    • 2014, Victoria Purman, Someone Like You:
      She did a quick stocktake of the man who was standing there, half-hidden behind the door, glowering at her.

Anagrams edit