pepsi
The Staple Drink in the South is Sweet Tea. Every Southerner depends on Sweet Tea with their meals.....
Forever.
drink bleach.
a staple pin
NOBODY REALLY KNOWS...........
The cotton gin made it profitable to grow short staple cotton across the South. Previously, it had only been profitable to grow long staple cotton on the seal islands.
It is suitable for mass-produced items like blankets.
smooth cotton and rough cotton Long staple & short staple
Generally wine remains safe to drink for a long long time. If it has not been properly sealed, the alcohol will gradually turn to vinegar. It tastes horrible.
Short-staple cotton differed from the long-staple variety in two ways: 1. It's bolls contained seeds that were much more difficult to extract by hand 2. It could be grown almost anywhere south of Virginia and Kentucky--the main requirement was a guarantee of two hundred frost-free days. Long-staple cotton requires a more semitropical area such as on the coasts of South Carolina and Georgia.
Not sure what your question is, but "staple" is a term that refers to the length of the fiber. Basically, longer staple length is considered more luxurious--and usually more expensive--because it is usually associated with benefits like more luster in the resulting fabric, less of a tendency to pill, the ability to weave or knit finer fabrics that are lighter in weight but still sturdy., etc. For explanations of how fiber properties translate to use in apparel, I usually recommend "The Fairchild Encyclopedia of Menswear," which has dozens of definitions that a layperson can understand. Supima is a brand name for extra-long staple cotton grown in the U.S. that is quality-controlled. By contrast, most cotton is considered "short staple."
Yes it is as long as it has been properly washed out!