STALE vs FLYBLOWN: NOUN
- Something set, or offered to view, as an allurement to draw others to any place or purpose; a decoy; a stool pigeon.
- A stalking-horse.
- A laughingstock; a dupe.
- The urine of certain animals, especially horses and camels.
- A stalk; stem.
- The stem of an arrow.
- A handle; especially, a long handle, as that of a rake, ladle, etc.
- A round or rung of a ladder; a step.
- Theft; stealing; pilfering.
- Stealth; stealthy movement.
- A trap, gin, or snare.
- The stock or handle of anything.
- An old preterit of steal.
- Urine of horses and cattle.
- A stalemate.
- Concealment; ambush.
- That which has become flat and tasteless, or spoiled by use or exposure, as stale beer.
- A person's position, especially in a battle-line.
- That which is stale or worn out by long keeping, or by use.
- Urine, esp. that of beasts.
- Urine, especially of horses or cattle.
- An object of deception, scorn, derision, merriment, ridicule, or the like; a dupe; a laughing-stock.
- An allurement; a bait; a decoy; a stool-pigeon: as, a stale for a foist or pickpocket.
- A prostitute.
- N/A
STALE vs FLYBLOWN: ADJECTIVE
- Legally unenforceable because of a claimant's delay in seeking enforcement.
- Ineffective or uninspired, usually from being out of practice or from having done the same thing for too long.
- Having lost freshness, effervescence, or palatability.
- Lacking originality or spontaneity; no longer new
- Showing deterioration from age
- A claim or demand which has not been pressed or demanded for a long time.
- Vapid or tasteless from age; having lost its life, spirit, and flavor, from being long kept.
- Not new; not freshly made.
- Having lost the life or graces of youth; worn out; decayed.
- Worn out by use or familiarity; having lost its novelty and power of pleasing; trite; common.
- An affidavit held above a year.
- No longer new; uninteresting
- Having lost its freshness from age; (of food) still edible, but hard or unpleasant from age.
- No longer new; no longer interesting; established; old; as, stale news, a stale joke, etc.
- Sordid, squalid
- Tainted
- Contaminated with flyblows
- Tainted or contaminated with flyblows; damaged; foul.
- Dirty or rundown; squalid.
- Tainted; corrupt.
- Especially of reputation
- Spoiled and covered with eggs and larvae of flies
- Foul and run-down and repulsive
- Contaminated with the eggs or larvae of blowflies.
STALE vs FLYBLOWN: VERB
- Urinate, of cattle and horses
- To urinate (of livestock, especially horses)
- N/A
STALE vs FLYBLOWN: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To make water; to discharge urine; -- said especially of horses and cattle.
- To urinate. Used especially of horses and camels.
- N/A
STALE vs FLYBLOWN: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To make vapid or tasteless; to destroy the life, beauty, or use of; to wear out.
- N/A
STALE vs FLYBLOWN: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To be overtrained; be injured by the strain of long training, so that the response to stimulus, mental or physical, is impaired: said of horses and athletes, and also used figuratively.
- In athletics, overtrained; injured by overtraining: noting the person or his condition.
- Lacking freshness, palatability, or showing deterioration from age
- No longer new
- Old and trite; lacking in novelty or freshness; hackneyed: as, stale news; a stale jest.
- Old and lifeless; the worse for age or for keeping; partially spoiled.
- Old (and therefore strong): said of malt liquors, which in this condition were more in demand.
- To make water; urinate: said of horses and cattle.
- To render stale, flat, or insipid; deprive of freshness, attraction, or interest; make common or cheap.
- (transitive; intransitive verb) To make or become stale.
- Tainted with flyblows; hence, spoiled; impure.
- Blemished, especially of reputation
STALE vs FLYBLOWN: RELATED WORDS
- Hard, Old, Mouldy, Flyblown, Cold, Addled, Spoiled, Wilted, Limp, Bad, Maggoty, Musty, Unoriginal, Rancid, Moldy
- Tainted, Tarnished, Blemished, Besmirched, Damaged, Sullied, Spotted, Sordid, Stale, Stained, Unclean, Soiled, Dirty, Squalid, Maggoty
STALE vs FLYBLOWN: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Hard, Old, Mouldy, Flyblown, Cold, Addled, Spoiled, Wilted, Limp, Bad, Maggoty, Musty, Unoriginal, Rancid, Moldy
- Tainted, Tarnished, Blemished, Besmirched, Damaged, Sullied, Spotted, Sordid, Stale, Stained, Unclean, Soiled, Dirty, Squalid, Maggoty
STALE vs FLYBLOWN: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Content Part I: Stale and Local Govemmemldemificationand Certification.
- Valuing securities with stale prices for GIPS comp.
- Przechowywanie danych Wymagania na przestau0144 dyskowu0105 stale rosnu0105.
- In this step weloop to loop through each stale PV and populate the to query each LV to find which ones have stale PPs.
- Stale topics are constantly changing, and it is ultimately up to the discretion of the moderators whether a topic is stale or not.
- In other cases, however, one may never want to access stale data, and instead make sure that stale data is never accessed.
- Stale File Handle First let us try to understand the concept of Stale File Handle.
- The stale date cannot exceedthe maximum stale date setting.
- But this feud is as stale as stale bread.
- The room was cold but still it smelled of stale booze and stale man.
- You got flyblown in your beard, that, I will never forget, so many filthy maggots in such a small space.
- His mouth harbours a sour, flyblown smell and would be dark and sticky inside.
- Carencro prepledge Myrmicidae inhabitate indoctrinated isopleurous flyblown unparadoxically outr underfalconer saccule Angl.
STALE vs FLYBLOWN: QUESTIONS
- What happens if you challenge a stale search warrant?
- How many answers to the stale smelling crossword clue?
- How do I enable automatic scavenging of stale Records?
- How to scavenge stale resource records in Windows DNS?
- How does stale-while-revalidate work with service workers?
- Why is PNRP not returning stale addresses like DNS?
- What is the Directiva de Respuesta stale while revalidate?
- What happens when a VCS configuration becomes stale?
- When do third quarter financial statements go stale?
- When Nginx retrieves fresh content after serving stale?
- N/A