Staple STAPLE, n. [G., a stake, a pile or heap, a staple, stocks, a
mart. The primary sense of the root is to set, to fix. Staple is that
which is fixed, or a fixed place, or it is a pile or store.] 1. A
settled mart or market; an emporium. In England, formerly, the kings
staple was established in certain ports or towns, and certain goods could
not be exported, without being first brought to these ports to be rated
and charged with the duty payable to the king or public. The principal
commodities on which customs were levied, were wool, skins and lether,
and these were originally the staple commodities. Hence the words staple
commodities, came in time to signify the principal commodities produced
by a country for exportation or use. Thus cotton is the staple commodity
of South Carolina, Georgia and other southern states of America. Wheat
is the staple of Pennsylvania and New York. 2. A city or town where
merchants agree to carry certain commodities. 3. The thread or pile
of wool, cotton or flax. Thus we say, this is wool of a coarse staple,
or fine staple. In America, cotton is of a short staple, long staple,
fine staple, etc. The cotton of short staple is raised on the upland;
the sea-island cotton is of a fine long staple. 4. A loop of iron,
or a bar or wire bent and formed with two points to be driven into wood,
to hold a hook, pin, etc. Staple of land, the particular nature and
quality of land. STAPLE, a. 1. Settled; established in
commerce; as a staple trade. 2. According to the laws of commerce;
marketable; fit to be sold. [Not much used.] 3. Chief; principal;
regularly produced or made for market; as staple commodities. [This is
now the most general acceptation of the word.]
staple
adj 1: necessary or important, especially regarding food or
commodities; "wheat is a staple crop"
n 1: (usually plural) a necessary commodity for which demand is
constant [syn: basic, staple]
2: a natural fiber (raw cotton, wool, hemp, flax) that can be
twisted to form yarn; "staple fibers vary widely in length"
[syn: staple, staple fiber, staple fibre]
3: material suitable for manufacture or use or finishing [syn:
raw material, staple]
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
v 1: secure or fasten with a staple or staples; "staple the
papers together" [ant: unstaple]
staple I. nounEtymology: Middle English stapel post, staple, from Old English
stapol post; akin to Middle Dutch stapel step, heap, emporium,
Old English steppan to step Date: 13th century
a usually U-shaped fastener: as a. a metal loop both ends of
which are driven into a surface to hold the hook, hasp, or bolt of a lock,
secure a rope, or fix a wire in place b. a small wire both ends
of which are driven through layers of thin and easily penetrable material
(as paper) and usually clinched to hold the layers together c.
a usually metal surgical fastener used to hold layers of tissue together
(as in the closure of an incision)
II. transitive verb (stapled; stapling)
Date: 14th century to provide with or secure by staples
III. nounEtymology: Middle English, from Anglo-French
estaple, from Middle Dutch stapel emporium Date: 15th
century 1. a town used as a center for the sale or exportation of
commodities in bulk 2. a place of supply ;source3.
a chief commodity or production of a place 4.a. a commodity for which the demand is constant b. something
having widespread and constant use or appeal c. the sustaining or
principal element ;substance5.raw material6.a. textile fiber (as wool and rayon) of relatively short length
that when spun and twisted forms a yarn rather than a filament b.
the length of a piece of such textile fiber
IV. adjectiveDate: 1615 1. used, needed, or
enjoyed constantly usually by many individuals 2. produced regularly
or in large quantities <staple crops such as wheat and rice>
3.principal, chief
staple 1. n. & v. --n. a U-shaped metal bar or piece of wire with pointed ends for driving into, securing, or fastening together various materials or for driving through and clenching
papers, netting, electric wire, etc. --v.tr. provide or fasten with a staple. Phrases and idioms: staple gun a hand-held device for driving in staples. Derivatives: stapler
n. Etymology: OE stapol f. Gmc 2. n., adj., & v. --n. 1 the principal or an important article of commerce (the staples of British Industry). 2 the chief element or a
main component, e.g. of a diet. 3 a raw material. 4 the fibre of cotton or wool etc. as determining its quality (cotton of fine staple). --adj. 1 main or principal (staple
commodities). 2 important as a product or an export. --v.tr. sort or classify (wool etc.) according to fibre. Etymology: ME f. OF estaple market f. MLG, MDu. stapel market (as
STAPLE(1))
staple
(staples, stapling, stapled)
1. A staple food, product, or activity is one that is basic and important in people's
everyday lives.
The Chinese also eat a type of pasta as part of their staple diet...Staple goods are disappearing from the shops.ADJ: ADJ n
• Staple is also a noun.
Fish is a staple in the diet of many Africans.N-COUNT
2. A staple is something that forms an important part of something else.
Political reporting has become a staple of American journalism.N-COUNT: usu N of n
3. Staples are small pieces of bent wire that are used mainly for holding sheets of
paper together firmly. You put the staples into the paper using a device called a stapler.
N-COUNT
4. If you staple something, you fasten it to something else or fix it in place using
staples.
Staple some sheets of paper together into a book....polythene bags stapled to an illustrated card.VERB: V n with adv, V-ed
Staple \Sta"ple\, n. [AS. stapul, stapol, stapel, a step, a
prop, post, table, fr. stapan to step, go, raise; akin to D.
stapel a pile, stocks, emporium, G. stapela heap, mart,
stake, staffel step of a ladder, Sw. stapel, Dan. stabel, and
E. step cf. OF. estaple a mart, F. ['e]tape. See Step.]
1. A settled mart; an emporium; a city or town to which
merchants brought commodities for sale or exportation in
bulk; a place for wholesale traffic.
The customs of Alexandria were very great, it having
been the staple of the Indian trade. --Arbuthnot.
For the increase of trade and the encouragement of
the worthy burgesses of Woodstock, her majesty was
minded to erect the town into a staple for wool.
--Sir W.
Scott.
Note: In England, formerly, the king's staple was established
in certain ports or towns, and certain goods could not
be exported without being first brought to these places
to be rated and charged with the duty payable of the
king or the public. The principal commodities on which
customs were lived were wool, skins, and leather; and
these were originally the staple commodities.
2. Hence: Place of supply; source; fountain head.
Whitehall naturally became the chief staple of news.
Whenever there was a rumor that any thing important
had happened or was about to happen, people hastened
thither to obtain intelligence from the fountain
head. --Macaulay.
3. The principal commodity of traffic in a market; a
principal commodity or production of a country or
district; as, wheat, maize, and cotton are great staples
of the United States.
We should now say, Cotton is the great staple, that
is, the established merchandize, of Manchester.
--Trench.
4. The principal constituent in anything; chief item.
5. Unmanufactured material; raw material.
6. The fiber of wool, cotton, flax, or the like; as, a coarse
staple; a fine staple; a long or short staple.
7. A loop of iron, or a bar or wire, bent and formed with two
points to be driven into wood, to hold a hook, pin, or the
like.
8. (Mining)
(a) A shaft, smaller and shorter than the principal one,
joining different levels.
(b) A small pit.
9. A district granted to an abbey. [Obs.] --Camden.
Staple \Sta"ple\, a.
1. Pertaining to, or being market of staple for, commodities;
as, a staple town. [R.]
2. Established in commerce; occupying the markets; settled;
as, a staple trade. --Dryden.
3. Fit to be sold; marketable. [R.] --Swift.
4. Regularly produced or manufactured in large quantities;
belonging to wholesale traffic; principal; chief.
Wool, the great staple commodity of England.
--H???om.
staple
I. n.1. Chief commodity (of a country or a district), principal production.
2. Fibre (of cotton, wool, etc.), pile, filament, thread.
3. Raw material, unmanufactured material.
4. Bulk, mass, body, substance, principal part, greater part, chief ingredient.
II. a.
Chief, principal.
staple
̈ɪˈsteɪpl adj.
1 basic, elementary, essential, necessary, requisite, required, vital, indispensable,
critical, fundamental, primary, principal, main, chief: These people cannot afford even staple
commodities like flour and salt.
2 standard, usual, habitual, ordinary, customary, prevailing, normal, conventional,
universal: The staple fare on television seems to consist of old and new sitcoms. --n.
3 Often, staples. necessities, essentials, basics, fundamentals: Supermarkets disperse
low-cost staples such as bread, tea, and milk to force shoppers to pass luxury items. Marital
and financial problems are the staples of soap operas.
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