A long piece of wood; a stick; the long handle of an instrument or weapon; a pole or stick, used for many purposes; as, a surveyor's staff; the staff of a spear or pike.
A stick carried in the hand for support or defense by a person walking; hence, a support; that which props or upholds.
A pole, stick, or wand borne as an ensign of authority; a badge of office; as, a constable's staff.
A pole upon which a flag is supported and displayed.
The grooved director for the gorget, or knife, used in cutting for stone in the bladder.
A small pole from which a flag is flown.
A wooden pole used to carry a flag. These were called pikes (for infantry units) and lances (for cavalry units) during the civil war.
The wooden pole on which any type of military flag is attached. In specific Civil War military usage, the infantry staffs were termed "pikes" while cavalry regiments carried flags mounted on "lances."
A blunt two handed weapon. Excellent defensively, though does less damage than a blade. One of the flustered looking people running around during an event. Staff arbitrates the rules, writes the plot for the adventure, keeps track of all the in game stats, and ensures out of game things run as smoothly as possible by securing the land, following up with players, etc.
Wooden stick or metal rod which was carried by a train traveling on a single-track block. In 20th century practice, the staff had to be inserted into a locked cabinet on exiting a block, to clear the signals for other traffic.
a. basic unit of measure, six feet, two Prime metres b. a weapon one staff in length carried as a sign of a brehon's authority; not commonly used by warriors
A pole or mast, used to hoist flags upon.
is a pole a flag hangs on.
Ritual tool which corresponds to the wand or athame.
a strong rod or stick with a specialized utilitarian purpose; "he walked with the help of a wooden staff"
a rod carried as a symbol
a basic weapon using pole arm techniques
a kind of weapon that you can equip
a much, much better weapon to my taste
a two handed , projectile weapon that can require one of a variety of monk , mesmer , elementalist , necromancer , or ritualist attributes
a wonderful group of people, and it was a great experience to have the opportunity to work with them, and I believe that those experiences will stick out most in my mind
A cylindrical piece of wood or metal to which a flag is attached or from which it is hoisted.
The staff, flagstaff, or flagpole is the pole upon which the flag is supported.
is a pole to which a flag is fastened.
Normally a long wooden weapon designed to hit enemies.
The pole used to support a flag especially when carried.
the pole on which any type of flag is attached. In Civil War usage the infantry staffs were called pikes and the cavalry or mounted artillery staffs were called lances.
The wooden pole on which any type of military flag is attached. During the Civil War, Cavalry regiments used the term lances, while infantry regiments used the term pikes.
A vertical pole on which flags can be raised.
A staff is a large, thick stick or stick-shaped object used to help with walking, as a status symbol, or as a weapon. An older plural form of staff is staves (compare wolf, wolves and knife, knives). In American English the usual plural form has become staffs, however British and International English regard both as acceptable and "staves" as preferred.