sticks and stone

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sticks and stone

A child builds a small fort with sticks and stones in the backyard.

Definition

Noun phrase: - A general term for building materials: The phrase "sticks and stone" refers broadly to the basic, often natural, materials used in construction, such as wood, stone, brick, and concrete. It emphasizes the fundamental physical components of a structure.

Usage

The phrase is used as a collective noun to describe the raw or assembled materials that form a building or other construction. - The old cottage was built from simple sticks and stone. - After the storm, all that remained of the shed was a pile of sticks and stone.

Advanced Usage
  • The phrase can be used metaphorically to refer to the basic, tangible elements or foundations of something non-physical.
    • Their argument was not just about ideas; it was about the sticks and stone of policy—the actual budgets and regulations.
Variants and Related Words
  • Building materials: A more modern and direct synonym.
  • Bricks and mortar: A common idiom specifically referring to physical buildings or the property business, but conceptually similar.
Synonyms
  • Construction materials
  • Building supplies
  • Raw materials (in a construction context)
Related Idioms
  • "Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me.": This is a common children's proverb used as a retort to insults or name-calling. It contrasts physical harm ("sticks and stones") with verbal harm ("words"). It is the most famous usage of these words together, but it is a distinct, fixed idiom separate from the general building materials definition.
    • When the bully called him names, the boy just said, "Sticks and stones may break my bones..." and walked away.
sticks and stone

A child builds a small fort with sticks and stones in the backyard.

Noun
  1. a general term for building materials