Merriam-Webster Collegiate® Dictionarysta·sisPronunciation: ‘stā-səs, ‘sta-Function: nounInflected Form: pluralsta·ses \‘stā-ˌsēz, ‘sta-\Etymology: New Latin, fromGreek, act or condition of standing, stopping, from histasthai to stand ― more at STANDDate: 1745
1: a slowing or stoppage of the normal flow of a bodily fluid or semifluid: as a: slowing of the current of circulating blood b: reduced motility of the intestines with retention of feces
2 a: a state of static balance or equilibrium : STAGNATIONb: a state or period of stability during which little or no evolutionary change in a lineage occurs-stasisFunction: noun combining formInflected Form: plural-stasesEtymology: New Latin, from Greek stasis
1: stoppage : slowing <hemostasis> <bacteriostasis>
2: stable state <homeostasis>…Concise Oxford English Dictionarystasis’steɪsɪs, ‘sta-■ noun
formal or technical a period or state of inactivity or equilibrium.
Medicine a stoppage of flow of a body fluid.
C18: mod. L., from Gk, lit. ‘standing, stoppage’, from sta-, base of histanai’to stand’.-stasis■ combining form (plural -stases) Physiology slowing down; stopping: haemostasis.
-static combining form.
from Gk stasis ‘standing, stoppage’….EngMacstasisn. (pl. stases) 1. med. стаза.; 2. стагнација, стагнирање