We use 'stale' to describe food that has gone bad or lost its freshness over time. Stale bread feels hard and dry, and stale chips lose their crunch. This is one of the most common uses of the word in everyday life.
This bread is stale and very hard now.
Do not drink that stale milk from yesterday.
When we describe air or a room as 'stale,' we mean it feels heavy, unpleasant, and lacks good circulation. This often happens in rooms that have been closed for a long time. It gives people an uncomfortable or suffocating feeling.
The room smelled stale after being closed all week.
Open the windows because the air feels very stale.
'Stale' can describe ideas, jokes, or stories that have been used so many times they are boring. If something is stale in this sense, it means it has lost its power to surprise or interest people. Writers and speakers should try to avoid stale expressions.
He always tells the same stale jokes at parties.
That stale news story was everywhere last month.
When a person 'goes stale,' it means they have lost their energy, creativity, or high performance level. This often happens to athletes, artists, and workers who do not take breaks. It is similar to feeling burned out or mentally exhausted.
The athlete went stale after training every day for months.
She felt stale at work and needed a vacation.
In legal contexts, 'stale' refers to a claim or legal action that has expired due to the passage of time. Most legal systems have rules called statutes of limitations that prevent people from bringing very old cases to court. A stale claim is essentially legally dead.
The lawyer said the claim had become stale under the law.
A stale debt cannot be collected in court anymore.
'Stale' in strategic contexts like chess or negotiations describes a situation where no side can make progress. It suggests a complete lack of new options or movement. This meaning is closely related to the chess term 'stalemate,' which comes from the same root.
The chess game ended in a stale position for both players.
Negotiations became stale with no new ideas offered.
This is a very old and rare use of 'stale' as a verb, found mainly in historical texts and old English literature. It specifically referred to the act of urination in animals, particularly horses. Modern speakers almost never use this meaning today.
Old texts describe horses staling in the stable yard.
The word stale was used for animals urinating in old English.
In banking, a check or financial document becomes 'stale' when it is too old to be accepted by a bank. In most countries, checks are considered stale after six months from the date written on them. Banks will typically refuse to process a stale check.
The bank rejected the check because it was stale.
A stale check is usually more than six months old.