step
An advance or movement made from one foot to the other; a pace.
(Q3289701)A rest, or one of a set of rests, for the foot in ascending or descending, as a stair, or a rung of a ladder.
The part of a spade, digging stick or similar tool that a digger's foot rests against and presses on when digging; an ear, a foot-rest.
(glassblowing) The button joining a glass's stem to its foot.
A distinct part of a process; stage; phase.
A running board where passengers step to get on and off the bus.
The space passed over by one movement of the foot in walking or running.
A small space or distance.
A print of the foot; a footstep; a footprint; track.
A gait; manner of walking.
Proceeding; measure; action; act.
(in the plural) A walk; passage.
(in the plural) A portable framework of stairs, much used indoors in reaching to a high position.
(nautical) A framing in wood or iron which is intended to receive an upright shaft; specifically, a block of wood, or a solid platform upon the keelson, supporting the heel of the mast.
(machines) One of a series of offsets, or parts, resembling the steps of stairs, as one of the series of parts of a cone pulley on which the belt runs.
(machines) A bearing in which the lower extremity of a spindle or a vertical shaft revolves.
(music) (music) The interval between two contiguous degrees of the scale.
(kinematics) A change of position effected by a motion of translation.
(programming) A constant difference between consecutive values in a series.
(primarily Netherlands) Kick scooter.
Stepping (style of dance)
To move the foot in walking; to advance or recede by raising and moving one of the feet to another resting place, or by moving both feet in succession.
To walk; to go on foot; especially, to walk a little distance.
To walk slowly, gravely, or resolutely.
To dance.
(figuratively) To move mentally; to go in imagination.
To set, as the foot.
(nautical) To fix the foot of (a mast) in its step; to erect.
To advance a process gradually, one step at a time.
(AAVE) To depart.
(slang) To be confrontational.
(colloquial) A stepchild.
(colloquial) A stepsibling.