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[ US /ˈstæʃ/ ]
[ UK /stˈæʃ/ ]
VERB
  1. save up as for future use
NOUN
  1. a secret store of valuables or money

How To Use stash In A Sentence

  • In the VIP section, or VNP (Very Nice People) as Innocent called it, we amused ourselves by reading a stash of Innocent bottle labels.
  • They were often subjected to violence and had their homes used as stash houses. Times, Sunday Times
  • You are born-again, re-sobered, a former hardcore binge drinker and rumored huge fan of various illegal substances back in college, and you had at least one DUI arrest and went AWOL from the National Guard, and you've stashed away from public view all records of both your tenure as Texas governor, and those SEC investigations into your alleged insider trading. Chaos Theory:
  • It had something to do with sex—complete with pictures—and the dog-eared corners attested to its being quickly stashed under mattresses in numerous adolescent occupied homes.
  • Local police - once again, actors - raid the villa and unearth a stash of illegal porn, blaming its existence on the harangued party boys, who now believe themselves to be facing time in a Spanish lock-up.
  • Maybe he is stashed away in the wardrobe.
  • Although police found nothing on the man and woman, both from Bristol, they found a stash of stolen goods in the car worth £180.
  • The next morning I waited until Marc went out and then I used mam's phone to call the police and grass Marc for the twenty grams of cocaine he had stashed in a haversack under the stairs.
  • It's a must-have for the new sport of geocaching - a high-tech treasure hunt in which you're given a latitude and longitude to help you find a hidden stash.
  • Stash old plastic or paper shopping bags near the rubbish or garbage bin and then you can re-cycle them as bin liners.
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