From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishstick with something/somebody phrasal verb informal1 FINISH DOING somethingto continue doing something the way you did or planned to do before Let’s stick with the original plans.2 NEARto stay close to someone You just stick with me. I’ll explain everything as we go along.3 CONTINUE/NOT STOPto continue doing something, especially something difficult If you stick with it, your playing will gradually get better.4 be stuck with something/somebody to be made to accept something, do something, spend time with someone etc, when you do not want to Bill left and I was stuck with the bill.5 REMEMBERto remain in someone’s memory Those words will stick with me for the rest of my life. → stick→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
stick with it• After Clinton was elected, they were stuck with it.• But Cindy and George stuck with it.• Get the correct name and stick with it.• If an organism has haemoglobin, it is stuck with it.• Once you have a routine in place, stick with it for a while.• Any new food regime has to be simple to follow if you are to stick with it for any length of time.• Buying in that year and sticking with it through Dec. 30 would have meant a 16. 1 percent annual return.• We're going to stick with it till we get the job done.be stuck with something/somebody• Rosenberg was stuck with 400 shirts that cost $ 4 each.• Chutra and I were stuck with each other like binary stars.• He sat thinking how he was stuck with her, how there was no privacy in this house for emergency situations.• I suppose I was stuck with him, like it or not.• If an organism has haemoglobin, it is stuck with it.• Now they are stuck with those higher prices.• All four of them were stuck with us!• If she was stuck with wanting a man whose background and conditioning were alien to her, then that was her problem.