Stand is highly versatile with distinct physical, abstract, and idiomatic meanings. Master the basic physical sense first (A1), then add the tolerance meaning (B1) and abstract uses (B1-B2). British learners need 'stand for election'; Americans use 'run for'.
Core Meanings & Usage Patterns
This multi has 10 main meanings. Each card shows the meaning, grammatical pattern, and usage rules.
be upright on feet
Essential
The most basic meaning: your body is upright on your feet, not sitting or lying. Very common with location words (stand here, stand by the door) and manner (stand still, stand quietly). Essential for A1 learners.
stand (+ adverb/preposition phrase)place something upright
Important
You put an object in an upright position somewhere. The object must be something that can be positioned vertically. Common with furniture and tools: stand the ladder against the wall, stand books on the shelf.
stand + direct object (+ preposition phrase)tolerate or endure
Essential
When you can't stand something, you find it unbearable or very unpleasant. Almost always used in negative forms (can't stand, couldn't stand) or questions. Follow with a noun or -ing form, not infinitive.
can't/cannot stand + noun/pronoun/-ing formremain valid or unchanged
Important
An offer, decision, or rule continues to be true or in force. The subject is typically abstract (not a person). Common with 'still': the offer still stands, my decision stands.
stand (+ adverb)be in particular state
Useful
Describes being in a specific condition or situation at a point in time. Used for statistics (unemployment stands at 5%), scores, or states (the house stands empty). Often with 'at' or 'as'.
stand + at/as + noun/numberbe located or situated
Important
A building or structure is permanently positioned in a place. More formal than 'is located'. Common with historical or prominent buildings: the castle stands on a hill, a church stands in the village center.
stand + preposition phrase (location)withstand or resist
Useful
Something successfully survives pressure, examination, or time. Common collocations: stand the test (of time), stand scrutiny, stand close examination. The subject must be strong or durable enough to resist.
stand + direct objectbe candidate for election
Useful
British English for being a candidate in an election. Common with 'for' (stand for parliament, stand for election) or 'as' (stand as mayor). American English uses 'run for' instead.
stand for/as + nounsupport structure or object
Important
A piece of furniture or equipment that holds or supports something. Often appears in compound nouns: music stand, coat stand, bike stand. Very practical vocabulary for describing household and office items.
noun: (article) + stand (+ preposition phrase)position or attitude
Important
Your opinion or position on an issue, especially when publicly stated. Common with 'take' or 'make': take a stand against racism, make a stand for justice. Often implies courage or principle.
noun: take/make + (article) + stand + on/againstFormal vs Informal Usage
Learn when to use “Stand” and when to choose more formal alternatives.
All Forms of “Stand”
| Base Form | stand |
|---|---|
| 3rd Person | stands |
| Past Simple | stood |
| Past Participle | stood |
| Present Participle | standing |
Common Collocations
These are the most natural word combinations with “Stand” – learn them as fixed phrases.
- stand still
- stand up
- stand firm
- stand by
- stand for
- stand against
- can't stand
- couldn't stand
- won't stand
- stand the test
- stand trial
- stand guard
- music stand
- coat stand
- bike stand
- take a stand
- make a stand
- still stands
- always stands
- firmly stand
- stand at
- stand on
- stand in
- stand a chance
- stand corrected
- stand accused
- stand for justice
- stand against racism
- stand on principle
- stand election
- stand parliament
- stand office
- stand empty
- stand alone
- stand ready
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Learn from these typical errors and avoid them in your own usage.
Use 'at' for specific locations where you wait, not 'in'
Use gerund (-ing form) after 'can't stand', not infinitive
Use present perfect for permanent location, not continuous
When positioning an object, you must include the object
British English uses 'stand for', American uses 'run for'
The decision itself stands; person doesn't stand at decision
Use 'close examination' or 'scrutiny' as fixed collocations
Stand meaning tolerate is almost always negative; use tolerate/bear in positive
Phrasal Verbs with “Stand”
This verb forms 15-20 common phrasal verbs. Here are some of the most essential ones:
Full coverage in dedicated phrasal-verb module
Idiomatic Expressions
There are approximately 10-15 common idioms using “Stand”. Here are some you should know:
- stand on your own two feet
- stand your ground
- stand the test of time
- make your hair stand on end
- stand in someone's way
Full idioms in dedicated module