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Staple   /stˈeɪpəl/   Listen
Staple

noun
1.
(usually plural) a necessary commodity for which demand is constant.  Synonym: basic.
2.
A natural fiber (raw cotton, wool, hemp, flax) that can be twisted to form yarn.  Synonyms: staple fiber, staple fibre.
3.
Material suitable for manufacture or use or finishing.  Synonym: raw material.
4.
A short U-shaped wire nail for securing cables.
5.
Paper fastener consisting of a short length of U-shaped wire that can fasten papers together.
verb
(past & past part. stapled; pres. part. stapling)
1.
Secure or fasten with a staple or staples.
adjective
1.
Necessary or important, especially regarding food or commodities.



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"Staple" Quotes from Famous Books



... planted, and promised to become a staple of the Islands; but a blight attacked the trees and proved so incurable that the best plantations were dug up and turned into sugar; and the export of coffee, which has been very variable, but which rose to 415,000 ...
— Northern California, Oregon, and the Sandwich Islands • Charles Nordhoff

... Yet the staple of public opinion was sound, as it must be where women predominate. The best of women could not see why they should not have anything they wanted for less than it cost the maker. To gaze at a sister woman better ...
— Mary Anerley • R. D. Blackmore

... he had never seen raw cotton, only a little of which, indeed, had been raised in the United States. It had not been profitable because of the difficulty of picking out the green cottonseed. To separate one pound of the staple from the seed was a day's work, so that cotton was considered rather as a curiosity than as a profitable crop. Whitney was impressed by the possibilities of cotton culture, could this obstacle be overcome, and devoted his spare time to the construction ...
— American Men of Mind • Burton E. Stevenson

... second his hand touched the window-ledge. He felt along the sash and shoved upward. To his surprise, the window lifted easily. But the hand he shoved without met, as he expected it would, a heavy wooden shutter; and his investigating fingers disclosed, moreover, a padlock, that, by means of a staple sunk in the sill, locked the shutter fast. No hope of getting ...
— Fire Mountain - A Thrilling Sea Story • Norman Springer

... to the coast. Flour they generally captured from the Spanish. They seldom were without a supply, for it is often mentioned as a marching ration—"a doughboy, or dumpling," boiled with fat, in a sort of heavy cake, a very portable and filling kind of victual. At sea their staple food was flesh—either boucanned meat or salted turtle. Their allowance, "twice a day to every one," was "as much as he can eat, without either weight or measure." Water and strong liquors were allowed (while they ...
— On the Spanish Main - Or, Some English forays on the Isthmus of Darien. • John Masefield


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