staid
[ steyd ]
/ steɪd /
adjective
of settled or sedate character; not flighty or capricious.
fixed, settled, or permanent.
verb
Archaic.
a simple past tense and past participle of stay1.
Origin of staid
1535–45 for adj. use
SYNONYMS FOR staid
1
proper,
serious,
decorous,
solemn.
Staid,
sedate,
settled indicate a sober and composed type of conduct.
Staid indicates an ingrained seriousness and propriety that shows itself in complete decorum; a colorless kind of correctness is indicated:
a staid and uninteresting family.
Sedate applies to one who is noticeably quiet, composed, and sober in conduct:
a sedate and dignified young man. One who is
settled has become fixed, especially in a sober or determined way, in manner, judgments, or mode of life:
He is young to be so settled in his ways.
OTHER WORDS FROM staid
Words nearby staid
Definition for staid (2 of 4)
stay
1
[ stey ]
/ steɪ /
verb (used without object), stayed or staid, stay·ing.
verb (used with object), stayed or staid, stay·ing.
noun
Origin of stay
1
1400–50; late Middle English
staien < Anglo-French
estaier, Old French
estai-, stem of
ester < Latin
stāre to
stand
Definition for staid (3 of 4)
stay
2
[ stey ]
/ steɪ /
noun
verb (used with object), stayed, stay·ing.
Definition for staid (4 of 4)
stay
3
[ stey ]
/ steɪ /
noun
any of various strong ropes or wires for steadying masts, funnels, etc.
verb (used with object), stayed, stay·ing.
to support or secure with a stay or stays: to stay a mast.
to put (a ship) on the other tack.
verb (used without object), stayed, stay·ing.
(of a ship) to change to the other tack.
Origin of stay
3
before 1150; Middle English
stey(e), Old English
stæg; cognate with German
Stag
Example sentences from the Web for staid
British Dictionary definitions for staid (1 of 4)
staid
/ (steɪd) /
adjective
of a settled, sedate, and steady character
rare
permanent
Derived forms of staid
staidly, adverb staidness, nounWord Origin for staid
C16: obsolete past participle of
stay
1
British Dictionary definitions for staid (2 of 4)
stay
1
/ (steɪ) /
verb
noun
See also
stay out
Word Origin for stay
C15
staien, from Anglo-French
estaier, to stay, from Old French
ester to stay, from Latin
stāre to stand
British Dictionary definitions for staid (3 of 4)
stay
2
/ (steɪ) /
noun
anything that supports or steadies, such as a prop or buttress
a thin strip of metal, plastic, bone, etc, used to stiffen corsets, etc
verb (tr) archaic
(often foll by up)
to prop or hold
(often foll by up)
to comfort or sustain
(foll by on or upon)
to cause to rely or depend
See also
stays (def. 1)
Word Origin for stay
C16: from Old French
estaye, of Germanic origin; compare
stay ³
British Dictionary definitions for staid (4 of 4)
stay
3
/ (steɪ) /
noun
a rope, cable, or chain, usually one of a set, used for bracing uprights, such as masts, funnels, flagpoles, chimneys, etc; guy
See also stays (def. 2), stays (def. 3)
Word Origin for stay
Old English
stæg; related to Old Norse
stag, Middle Low German
stach, Norwegian
stagle wooden post
Idioms and Phrases with staid
stay