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 stale [stel]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 尿

a. 不新鲜的, 陈腐的, 疲惫的, 陈旧的

vt. 使变旧, 走味

vi. 变陈旧, 走味, 失时效, 撒尿

[经] 失时效的, 停滞的




    stale
    [ verb ]
    1. urinate, of cattle and horses

    2. <verb.body>
    [ adj ]
    1. lacking freshness, palatability, or showing deterioration from age

    2. <adj.all>
      stale bread
      the beer was stale
    3. lacking originality or spontaneity; no longer new

    4. <adj.all>
      moth-eaten theories about race
      stale news


    Stale \Stale\ (st[=a]l), n. [OE. stale, stele, AS. st[ae]l,
    stel; akin to LG. & D. steel, G. stiel; cf. L. stilus stake,
    stalk, stem, Gr. steleo`n a handle, and E. stall, stalk, n.]
    The stock or handle of anything; as, the stale of a rake.
    [Written also {steal}, {stele}, etc.]

    But seeing the arrow's stale without, and that the head
    did go
    No further than it might be seen. --Chapman.


    Stale \Stale\, v. i. [Akin to D. & G. stallen, Dan. stalle, Sw.
    stalla, and E. stall a stable. [root] 163. See {Stall}, n.,
    and cf. {Stale}, a.]
    To make water; to discharge urine; -- said especially of
    horses and cattle. --Hudibras.


    Stale \Stale\, n. [See {Stale}, a. & v. i.]
    1. That which is stale or worn out by long keeping, or by
    use. [Obs.]

    2. A prostitute. [Obs.] --Shak.

    3. Urine, esp. that of beasts. ``Stale of horses.'' --Shak.


    Stale \Stale\, a. [Akin to stale urine, and to stall, n.;
    probably from Low German or Scandinavian. Cf. {Stale}, v. i.]
    1. Vapid or tasteless from age; having lost its life, spirit,
    and flavor, from being long kept; as, stale beer.

    2. Not new; not freshly made; as, stale bread.

    3. Having lost the life or graces of youth; worn out;
    decayed. ``A stale virgin.'' --Spectator.

    4. Worn out by use or familiarity; having lost its novelty
    and power of pleasing; trite; common. --Swift.

    Wit itself, if stale is less pleasing. --Grew.

    How weary, stale flat, and unprofitable
    Seem to me all the uses of this world! --Shak.

    {Stale affidavit} (Law), an affidavit held above a year.
    --Craig.

    {Stale demand} (Law), a claim or demand which has not been
    pressed or demanded for a long time.


    Stale \Stale\, n. [Cf. OF. estal place, position, abode, market,
    F. ['e]tal a butcher's stall, OHG. stal station, place,
    stable, G. stall (see {Stall}, n.); or from OE. stale theft,
    AS. stalu (see {Steal}, v. t.).]
    1. Something set, or offered to view, as an allurement to
    draw others to any place or purpose; a decoy; a stool
    pigeon. [Obs.]

    Still, as he went, he crafty stales did lay.
    --Spenser.

    2. A stalking-horse. [Obs.] --B. Jonson.

    3. (Chess) A stalemate. [Obs.] --Bacon.

    4. A laughingstock; a dupe. [Obs.] --Shak.


    Stale \Stale\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Staled} (st[=a]ld); p. pr. &
    vb. n. {Staling}.]
    To make vapid or tasteless; to destroy the life, beauty, or
    use of; to wear out.

    Age can not wither her, nor custom stale
    Her infinite variety. --Shak.

    1. But since then, sales have eroded amid criticism that the subcompacts' styling had become stale.
    2. Next time you find yourself having a cup of coffee and a stale Danish pastry in a motorway service station, look around you.
    3. Unfortunately, Richard Baskin's recreation of that spirited show in "SING" is as flat as a stale egg cream.
    4. These unpalatable recollections are now stale; younger voters regard them as history. Labour has not merely waited for time and the leftist ascendancy over its affairs to pass.
    5. But they'd best put some more punch in this series, or "Fresh Prince" will quickly become stale sitcom.
    6. Today, if stale ideology would cease to obscure reality, simultaneous reductions in the unemployment rate and in the price level could receive reinforcement from sustained economic growth.
    7. The company has said for several months that it has been trying to curb the loading habit, which causes excess inventories of billions of cigarettes to turn stale on dealers' shelves.
    8. John Campbell, a big Southern California dealer, says his VW sales have dropped 30% to 40% this year because "we have a number of models that are stale and have fallen off the charts."
    9. The air was thick with the smells of dogs, stale vodka and sweat. Nor had the reforms managed to get rid of the special waiting room for foreigners - a world of incredible comfort far removed from the din, grime, and chaos of the rest of the terminal.
    10. He said the chip tasted stale; Young estimated it was 2 years old.
    11. Every joke would be divinely stale. Human unpredictability is not always a source of happiness.
    12. It was such a pleasure to step onto an aircraft that smelled of new leather instead of stale tobacco!
    13. "The allegations of improper conduct are stale, unfounded and should be finally put to rest," Westinghouse said.
    14. Analysts say that by getting rid of a substantial amount of stale goods in the first quarter, L.A. Gear hopes to improve second-quarter results.
    15. Amateur chartism, that's how. Once the current euphoria is over, the great market debate of 1992 will resume: is this a stale bull market, or is it just tensing its muscles for a new rush?
    16. John Maynard Keynes, the British economist, reported that Germans would order two beers at a time because the beer would grow warm and stale more slowly than the price was rising.
    17. Mr. Ashley was forecasting earnings of "at worst 10 cents a share." Lands' End, a high-flier for most of the 1980s, stumbled in 1989 when its selection of khaki pants and rugby shirts suddenly seemed stale.
    18. The worst is sawdust stale and the best is never as good as Parmesan grated at home when needed - and not a moment before.
    19. The practice, which involved shipping too many cartons of cigarettes for distributors to sell over a given period of time, inflated sales and resulted in Reynolds having to take back huge quantities of stale product from wholesalers.
    20. But others said that rumor was stale speculation and had no influence on prices.
    21. This never fails to floor the opposition; and judging by the way Gordon Brown began his reply with prepared, but stale and inaccurately phrased, Labour party cliches, it will be quite effectively used on him. The word 'Budget' is used advisedly.
    22. Defense attorneys said the two were trying to get the sherbet out of Christopher's system because it was 3 weeks old and they believed it was dangerously stale.
    23. Like a pre-revolutionary stogie that someone forgot to put out, the 30-year-old policy toward Cuba is stale and smoldering.
    24. An open can of stale soda waited nearby in case Honey grew thirsty.
    25. We have firmly opted for overcoming ossified dogmas and stale patterns of thinking and stereotypes.
    26. Unfortunately, you will have to put up with Berkoff's stale parody of Essex Person.
    27. Country superstar Waylon Jennings was to join the Metro Police Blue Lights Band as entertainment at the fund-raiser, where guests dine on hot dogs on stale buns, pig knuckles, beans, barbecue and beer.
    28. "If there is going to be litigation, why stay it now and then rev it up again when the claims are becoming stale and memories are fading?" asked Lloyd B. Miller, an Anchorage attorney, representing a number of native Alaskan groups affected by the spill.
    29. It's hard to imagine this slim, stale, cliche-ridden piece of goods coming from the creators of "China Beach."
    30. The latter group finally won out, only to find that, by then, much of the bread in the shipment had gone stale.
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