Source : Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Stalk \Stalk\, n. [OE. stalke, fr. AS. st[ae]l, stel, a stalk.
See {Stale} a handle, {Stall}.]
1. (Bot.)
(a) The stem or main axis of a plant; as, a stalk of
wheat, rye, or oats; the stalks of maize or hemp.
(b) The petiole, pedicel, or peduncle, of a plant.
2. That which resembes the stalk of a plant, as the stem of a
quill. --Grew.
3. (Arch.) An ornament in the Corinthian capital resembling
the stalk of a plant, from which the volutes and helices
spring.
4. One of the two upright pieces of a ladder. [Obs.]
To climd by the rungs and the stalks. --Chaucer.
5. (Zo["o]l.)
(a) A stem or peduncle, as of certain barnacles and
crinoids.
(b) The narrow basal portion of the abdomen of a
hymenopterous insect.
(c) The peduncle of the eyes of decapod crustaceans.
6. (Founding) An iron bar with projections inserted in a core
to strengthen it; a core arbor.
{Stalk borer} (Zo["o]l.), the larva of a noctuid moth
({Gortyna nitela}), which bores in the stalks of the
raspberry, strawberry, tomato, asters, and many other
garden plants, often doing much injury.