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1637, John Taylor, The Famovs Historie of the most part of Drinks, in use now in the Kingdomes of Great Brittaine and Ireland:
The stronger Beere is divided into two parts (viz.) mild and stale; the first may ease a man of a drought, but the later is like water cast into a Smiths forge, and breeds more heartburning, and as rust eates into Iron, so overstale Beere gnawes auletholes in the entrales, or else my skill failes, and what I have written of it is to be held as a jest.
1826, A Practical Man, The Vintner's, Brewer's, Spirit Merchant's, and Licensed Victualler's Guide, page 243:
Particular care must be taken that the stale beer in which the isinglass is dissolved be perfectly clear and stale.
1829, David Booth, The Art of Brewing, page 52:
Is not that hard or stale beer mixed to give the porter the appearance of age at once, which formerly was allowed to be matured by time?
New freshe blood to ouersprinkle their stalemete that it may seme...newly kylled.
2012, Stephen Woodworth, In Golden Blood: Number 3 in series:
To her surprise, Abe did not come to collect her for the usual morning inhabitation session with Azure. She did not see him until almost noon, when he personally delivered lunch to her tent. Another stale roll and cup of water sat on the tray he carried. Abe hung his head, as abashed as Honorato had been. “This is all I could sneak in for now. I'll try to get more later.”
A two-days-old newspaper. You resent the stale thing as an affront.
2002, Mark Lawson, And They Rose Up: Days of Retribution:
Rick would comment on the fact that he'd never had such bad coffee, not even the mud at his precinct. Mark would tell him to quit with the stale joke, already
1742, T. Short, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, 42 226:
In barren Women, and stale Maids, Tapping should be very cautiously undertaken.
(in general) Not new or recent; having been in place or in effect for some time.
2014, David L. Hough, Street Strategies for Motorcyclists:
In most states, you can be ticketed for failing to clear the intersection, even if you are hemmed in by traffic. One good clue to a stale green light is the pedestrian signal.
The bug was found to be caused by stale data in the cache.
Usage notes
In the sense regarding food, usually (but not always) pejorative and synonymous with gone bad and turned. In reference to mead, wine, and bread, it can describe an acceptable or desired state (see crouton). In modern English, however, "stale beer" has been light struck, flat, or oxidized and is to be avoided.
1742, W. Ellis, London & Country Brewer, 4th edition, I 61:
In Case your Cask is a Butt,...have ready boiling...Water, which put in, and, with a long Stale and a little Birch fastened to its End, scrub the Bottom.
1890 February 4, Manchester Guardian, 12 3:
You came to me with the axe head in one hand and the stale in the other.
Stales, the staves, or risings of a ladder, or the staves of a rack in a stable.
1891, T. E. Smith, The Nova Scotia Fruit Grower, page 72:
Fruit ladders should be provided beforehand. They differ from the ordinary ladder by having the bottom rungs a little longer and the top of the side stales meeting together so is to rest in the fork of a limb.
1971, Research Paper - Issues 141-155, page 7:
The zigzag determines the order of the currents from which occur on the stales of the ladder and their relation with the currents from which occur on the rungs and ringles between them.
1792, Thomas Paine, A Rod in Brine, or a tickler for T. Paine, page 16:
To begin then: not long before this paragraph was written, P fell into doze, and dreamt, he saw Jacob's ladder with one foot standing on the earth, the other reaching up into heaven. Dukes, Marquisses, and other Peers, fancy represented to him, as standing on the upper stales; on the middle ones, Knights and Baronets, and under them, a train of Esquires and Gentlemen, reaching to the bottom.
1834, Joseph Adshead, A Circumstantial Narrative of the Wreck of the Rothsay, page 236:
Mr. Marsden managed, by dint of swimming, to come in contact with the form, to which hemself and friend had previously fixed the cord and thrown overboard; but this, from its shape, would have proved, in all probability, but a doubtful means of escape, had he not, after a time, fallen in with a small ladder, which he affixed with the cord to the form, placing his leg between the stales, and resting his body, sometimes at full length, when the breakers had fallen on the form.
The rental of the lands remained at these figures for many years, and the following extracts are examples of the payments made:— A.D. 1686, Utt, pd Thomas Rassel for a load of lime delivered to Smalhith Chappell 01₤ 11s. 0d. Itt . for a quire of paper 00₤ 00s. 06d. Itt . for a ladder for the use of the Chappel 33 stales long , at 2d yestale 00₤ 05s. 6d.
1998, Barney Edward Daley, Tobacco Parish: A Collection of South Windsor's Memories:
Ash was used for stales (ladder rungs).
2014, Matthew Engel, Engel's England: Thirty-nine counties, one capital and one man:
As a young man Mike Austen, a retired farmer now working as a guide at Brogdale, used to climb up a ladder with sixty 'stales', or rungs – eight inches between each of them – to pick the cherries in his father's orchard with a basket tied to either his waist or the ladder.
1550, Edward Halle, The Vnion of the Two Noble and Illustre Famelies of Lancastre and Yorke:
Wherefore they had a great avauntage, but in coclusion thie french menne were slayne, and their horses taken, and so the lyght horsement came wyth their catail, nere to the embushment, and the frenchimen folowed, that seyng the englyshmen that kept the stale, came in al hast & rescued their light horsemen, and draue the frenchemen backe, & then made returne to their beastes
1808, Raphael Holinshed, Chronicles of England, Scotland and Ireland, page 580:
All these in great hast came to Newnam bridge, where they found other Englishmen that had woone the bridge of the Frenchmen, and so all togither set foward to assaile the Frenchmen that kept the stale, and tarie till the residue of their companie which were gone a forraging vnto Calis walles were come: for the other that had spoiled the marishes were returned with a great bootie.
1818, William Stopford Kenny, Practical Chess Exercises, page 205:
You cannot take the queen without giving a stale, therefore you lose the game.
1577, R. Holinshed, Hist. Scotl., 471 2 in Chron., I:
The Lard of Drunlanrig lying althys while in ambush...forbare to breake out to gyue anye charge vppon his enimies, doubting least the Earle of Lennox hadde kept a stalebehynde.
Those of Crotta being hardly besieged by Metellus, were reduced to so hard a pinch, and strait necessitie of all manner of other beverage, that they were forced to drinke the stale or urine of their horses.
1928, Siegfried Sassoon, Memoirs of a Fox-Hunting Man, Penguin, published 2013, page 35:
A mile or two before we got to the meet he stopped at an inn, where he put our horses into the stable for twenty minutes, ‘to give them a chance to stale’.
Usage notes
Occasionally transitive, when in reference to horses or men pissingblood.
1577, Raphael Holinshed, “The Historie of England, from the Time that It Was First Inhabited, Vntill the Time that It Was Last Conquered”, in Chronicles, 79 2:
The Britaynes woulde oftentimes...lay their Cattell...in places conueniente, to bee as a stale to the Romaynes, and when the Romaynes shoulde make to them to fetche the same away,...they would fall vpon them.
1579, J. Stubbs, Discouerie Gaping Gulf:
Her daughter Margerit was the stale to lure...them that otherwise flewe hyghe...and could not be gotten.
1615, George Sandys, A Relation of a Iourney begun An: Dom: 1610, I 66:
...many of the Coffamen keeping beaytifull boyes, who ſerue as ſtales to procure them cuſtomers.
1670, J. Eachard, Grounds Contempt of Clergy, section 88:
Six-pence or a shilling to put into the Box, for a stale to decoy in the rest of the Parish.
c.1350, in N. H. Nicolas, Hist. Royal Navy (1847), II 491:
[Every time that it shall be ordered..that armed men..shall land on the enemy's coast to seek victuals... then there shall be ordained a sufficient ‘stale’ of armed men and archers who shall wait together on the land until the ‘forreiours’ return to them].
1892 [1484], Hieronim Łopaciński, editor, Reguła trzeciego zakonu św. Franciszka i drobniejsze zabytki języka polskiego z końca w. XV i początku XVI, Krakow, page 705:
Chcze, aby ony tho yego synovye, thą tho vyarą zsthalye vyznavaly a mocznye trzymaly
[Chce, aby oni to jego synowie, tę to wiarę stale wyznawali a mocnie trzymali]
B. Sieradzka-Baziur, Ewa Deptuchowa, Joanna Duska, Mariusz Frodyma, Beata Hejmo, Dorota Janeczko, Katarzyna Jasińska, Krystyna Kajtoch, Joanna Kozioł, Marian Kucała, Dorota Mika, Gabriela Niemiec, Urszula Poprawska, Elżbieta Supranowicz, Ludwika Szelachowska-Winiarzowa, Zofia Wanicowa, Piotr Szpor, Bartłomiej Borek, editors (2011–2015), “stale”, in Słownik pojęciowy języka staropolskiego [Conceptual Dictionary of Old Polish] (in Polish), Kraków: IJP PAN, →ISBN
According to Słownik frekwencyjny polszczyzny współczesnej (1990), stale is one of the most used words in Polish, appearing 20 times in scientific texts, 4 times in news, 25 times in essays, 10 times in fiction, and 8 times in plays, each out of a corpus of 100,000 words, totaling 67 times, making it the 974th most common word in a corpus of 500,000 words.[1]
References
^ Ida Kurcz (1990) “stale”, in Słownik frekwencyjny polszczyzny współczesnej [Frequency dictionary of the Polish language] (in Polish), volume 2, Kraków, Warszawa: Polska Akademia Nauk. Instytut Języka Polskiego, page 556
Further reading
stale in Wielki słownik języka polskiego, Instytut Języka Polskiego PAN
Maria Renata Mayenowa, Stanisław Rospond, Witold Taszycki, Stefan Hrabec, Władysław Kuraszkiewicz (2010-2023) “stale”, in Słownik Polszczyzny XVI Wieku [A Dictionary of 16th Century Polish]