Noun The country is in economic stasis. His art was characterized by bursts of creativity followed by long periods of stasis.
Recent Examples on the Web
Noun
But getting there wended viewers through television that was frustratingly recursive, holding the show and its talent effectively in stasis (with June inching towards freedom, then getting slapped back) for years. Daniel D'addario, Variety, 8 Sep. 2022 Executives scrambled over subsequent months to obey, and resolve its stasis.Bloomberg.com, 30 June 2022 With so many moving parts, some sort of constitutional reckoning seems inevitable as Scotland emerges from its coronavirus stasis. Alasdair Lane, Forbes, 5 May 2021 Economic decline was one of the most alarming threats early in the pandemic, and businesses are just now finding economic stasis. Kara Dennison, Forbes, 12 Aug. 2022 This idea that your attachment style is fixed and immutable, says Sequeira, can become a self-fulfilling prophecy which dooms relationships to stasis and failure. Vicky Spratt, refinery29.com, 6 June 2022 Run a tight ship and deliver value to clients; this period of stasis will pass, and your organization will be stronger for it. - Sheldon Fernandez, DarwinAI 6. Expert Panel®, Forbes, 15 Aug. 2022 Set after a nuclear apocalypse, Lilith Iyapo awakens hundreds of years past her time to find herself on board a spacecraft, saved from death with other survivors and kept in stasis by an alien race. Brienne Walsh, CNN, 3 Aug. 2022 While Stranger Things is in stasis, McLaughlin has multiple projects coming down the pipeline.Essence, 20 July 2022 See More
Word History
Etymology
Noun
New Latin, from Greek, act or condition of standing, stopping, from histasthai to stand — more at stand