Stim
noun, verb, slang ·Moderate ·College level
Definitions
- 1 Sensory stimulation. informal, uncountable
"“Electric therapy has been used in medicine for thousands of years,” says Ken Rusche, director of Wellington Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation Center, a physical therapist and athletic trainer. “[…] Electrical stim is being used in the field of medicine for rehabilitation and strengthening after injuries. […]”"
- 2 Synonym of stimulant (“drug”). slang
- 3 A whit or jot; the least amount. Ireland, rare
"That boy hasn't a stim of common sense."
- 4 Any repetitive self-stimulatory behavior (e.g. hand flapping, head banging, repeating noises or words), frequent in autistic people.
"Autistic people often stim with the help of technologies such as music and stim toys or tools to mediate between inner worlds and outer environments that may over/underwhelm us. […] At the beginning of March 2020, I discovered that many of the stims I regularly turned to were no longer accessible."
- 5 Any drug that stimulates a woman's ovaries to produce eggs. countable
- 1 To perform such a repetitive self-stimulatory action. intransitive
"Autistic people often stim with the help of technologies such as music and stim toys or tools to mediate between inner worlds and outer environments that may over/underwhelm us."
Example
More examples"“Electric therapy has been used in medicine for thousands of years,” says Ken Rusche, director of Wellington Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation Center, a physical therapist and athletic trainer. “[…] Electrical stim is being used in the field of medicine for rehabilitation and strengthening after injuries. […]”"
Etymology
Clipping of stimulation or stimulate.
Clipping of stimulant.
Likely related to Scots stime; both perhaps from Old English scima (“shine”).
Related phrases
More for "stim"
Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.