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Longman Dictionary English

From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishstaidstaid /steɪd/ adjective BORINGserious, old-fashioned, and boring a staid old bachelor
Examples from the Corpus
staid• The staid and once-serious network news has begun to look like glitzy local news operations.• Let us assume that Mr Peter Porter, an otherwise staid bureaucrat, spends his free time racing Porsche cars.• Because I was older and a bit more staid I was going to have a hard time.• The group managed to seem staid in comparison to Rollins' music.• It was high time that her church-and the staid old-line Protestants-got a run for the money.• They are the men and women who start vibrant new companies, turn around failing companies, and shake up staid ones.• staid scientific journals• The sentence I had just written in a staid serif typeface suddenly was pushed leeward.• She bought a long lease on the apartment in quiet and respectable Hahnwald, a leafy and staid suburb of Cologne.• Square-cut and staid to behold, it packs a potent punch quite at odds with its looks.
Origin staid (1500-1600) From the past participle of stay
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