0 to do the job that another person was going to do or usually does, or to take that person's place at an event, because they cannot be there:
1 a person who takes the place or does the job of another person for a short time, for example because the other person is ill or on holiday:
2 a person who takes the place or does the job of another person:
3 to do something that someone else is supposed to do or usually does, because they are unable to do it:
4 a person who takes the place or does the job of someone else for a short time because that person is not available:
If the latter, then hunger pangs must be some sort of illusion, a stand-in for states we cannot access consciously.
Proprietors' extended families and friends were often involved either as regular visitors to the home or as occasional stand-in carers.
False belief should be understood not as a stand-in for theoryof-mind understanding but as one of its components.
Thus, the "interpreter" is often acting as an assistant provider (or, conversely, as a stand-in for the patient) rather than permitting provider and patient to converse directly with each other.
The image no longer has the status of a stand-in or a more or less faithful substitute for concrete reality, but consists in an original, heuristic grasp thereof.
I am no more than a very temporary stand-in.
I do not believe that he is really the villain of the piece; he is merely the acting villain, a stand-in for other people.
There should be no difficulty in getting a stand-in in such circumstances.