When you leave them out for too long in the open air.
The homophone for "stale" is "stale," as in when two or more words sound the same but have different meanings.
A homophone for "stale" is "stale." Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings or spellings.
No, the words 'smell' and 'stale' do not rhyme. An example of words that rhyme are: Cat & Hat
Fresh
The word stale has a long A (ay) sound and a silent E, as in the words scale and swale. Other words that begin with the same sound are stable, stay and stain.
Stale, processed are opposite words to fresh
slate stale tales least
I do not have a stale mouth. Who said that i have a stale mouth? :D :D
stale laptop with catsup
No, the word stale is an adjective. The noun form for the adjective stale is staleness.
Not counting acronyms such as SAE (an automotive standard), there are 8 common 3-letter words in stale: ale, ate, eat, let, sat, sea, set, and tea (uncommon are eta, lea, and las).
fresh