STORY


Meaning of STORY in English

(stories)

Frequency: The word is one of the 700 most common words in English.

1.

A ~ is a description of imaginary people and events, which is written or told in order to entertain.

I shall tell you a ~ about four little rabbits.

...a popular love ~ with a happy ending.

N-COUNT

2.

A ~ is a description of an event or something that happened to someone, especially a spoken description of it.

The parents all shared interesting stories about their children...

Isak’s ~ is typical of a child who has a specific learning disability.

N-COUNT

3.

The ~ of something is a description of all the important things that have happened to it since it began.

...the ~ of the women’s movement in Ireland.

N-COUNT: usu N of n

4.

If someone invents a ~, they give a false explanation or account of something.

He invented some ~ about a cousin.

= tale, yarn

N-COUNT

5.

A news ~ is a piece of news in a newspaper or in a news broadcast.

Those are some of the top stories in the news...

They’ll do anything for a ~.

...front-page news stories.

N-COUNT

6.

see storey

see -storey

7.

see also cock-and-bull ~ , short ~ , sob ~ , success ~ , tall ~

8.

In British English, you use to cut a long ~ short to indicate that you are going to state the final result of an event and not give any more details. In American English, you say to make a long ~ short.

To cut a long ~ short, I ended up as managing director.

PHRASE: V inflects

9.

You use a different ~ to refer to a situation, usually a bad one, which exists in one set of circumstances when you have mentioned that it does not exist in another set of circumstances.

Where Marcella lives, the rents are fairly cheap, but a little further north it’s a different ~.

PHRASE: usu v-link PHR

10.

If you say it’s the same old ~ or it’s the old ~, you mean that something unpleasant or undesirable seems to happen again and again.

It’s the same old ~. They want one person to do three people’s jobs.

PHRASE: v-link PHR

11.

If you say that something is only part of the ~ or is not the whole ~, you mean that the explanation or information given is not enough for a situation to be fully understood.

This may be true but it is only part of the ~...

Jane goes to great lengths to explain that this is not the whole ~.

PHRASE: usu v-link PHR

12.

If someone tells you their side of the ~, they tell you why they behaved in a particular way and why they think they were right, when other people think that person behaved wrongly.

He had already made up his mind before even hearing her side of the ~.

PHRASE: side inflects

Collins COBUILD.      Толковый словарь английского языка для изучающих язык Коллинз COBUILD (международная база данных языков Бирмингемского университета) .