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rigid English

Meaning rigid meaning

What does rigid mean?
Definitions in simple English

rigid

A rigid object does not bend. It's possible to use flexible materials to form a rigid structure. fixed rather than moving rigorous and unbending uncompromising

rigid

(= stiff) incapable of or resistant to bending a rigid strip of metal a table made of rigid plastic a palace guardsman stiff as a poker stiff hair a stiff neck incapable of compromise or flexibility (= inflexible, unbending) incapable of adapting or changing to meet circumstances a rigid disciplinarian an inflexible law an unbending will to dominate designating an airship or dirigible having a form maintained by a stiff unyielding frame or structure (= fixed, set) fixed and unmoving with eyes set in a fixed glassy stare his bearded face already has a set hollow look — Connor Cruise O'Brien a face rigid with pain

Synonyms rigid synonyms

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Topics rigid topics

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Examples rigid examples

How do I use rigid in a sentence?

Simple sentences

He was rigid with fear.
Rigid wheels give sufficient stability to a low-speed vehicle steered by outside forces.
He was rigid with terror.
Tom stood rigid.
Military discipline is literally rigid.
Tom's father is very dogmatic and rigid in his views.

Movie subtitles

There is something hard and rigid in her expression far beyond her years.
We are not as rigid as we seem to be.
It is very rigid madam.
It lets you down, doesn't it? That signet ring. And the rigid forefinger.
I see a rigid fear in your eyes.
Don't be rigid, don't wobble.
In the beginning the movements were rigid, now I have more freedom of motion.
She lay there, rigid as a doll. her face pale.
In a genuine spastic paralysis, the leg wouldn't be so inflexibly rigid.
The unendurable oppression of the lungs. the stifling fumes of the damp earth. the rigid embrace of the coffin. the blackness of absolute night. and the silence. like an overwhelming sea.
She has merely broken a rigid and time-honoured. code of our society.
These rigid suits are made for statues not for men, especially at five in the morning.
Lurch not only needs a great teacher but also a great psychologist, a brilliant tactician, a rigid taskmaster.
Such rigid thinking.
Rigid.
Well, you don't have to get rigid about it.
If you'll just say it's yours being a clergyman, you're not subject to such rigid inspection.
The partition is very rigid because the stove is bolted to the floor on the other side.
This partition is very rigid, because the stove here is bolted to the floor.
But it's rigid. It's by the book.
I had my fill of rigid festivities in Austria.
Don't be rigid, don't wobble. Avec du charme.
Keep both hands rigid!
Did you notice how rigid she became?
And with those arm-like things, between the vertebrae. forces it to become arched and rigid.
Gravel, stone, marble, and straight lines marked out rigid spaces, areas devoid of mystery.
Madame believes in rigid discipline.
Rigid confinement for the rest of his life.
She has merely broken a rigid and time-honored code of our society-- a code so severe that whoever breaks it is hounded from our midst as unfit to live with.
I'm rigid about the napkin, you see.
The laws are very rigid.
We have a rigid caste system operating here.
I'm sorry, Captain Kirk, he has a rigid rule about that.
Despite pressure from the most rigid colonialists, the government had given orders not to open fire except as a last resort.
Of course, he's far superior to you as a person, but his morals are less rigid than mine.
Herbert was a minor official notorious for his rigid and limited patterns of thought.
Well, I shall try to be less rigid in my thinking.
Dead matter that is no longer rigid.

News and current affairs

In the American-Iranian equation it was the US, not Iran, that conducted rigid ideological diplomacy.
Finally, rigid labor markets and, more generally, regulatory constraints on prices and on the supply response of the economy, deepen recessionary reactions to various shocks, and contribute to the growth of unemployment.
More importantly, even the regulators themselves have ceased to believe in obsolete and rigid doctrines.
Developments in Morocco, Bahrain, and Jordan certainly seem to suggest that this changing of the guard can help soften rigid political structures and allow for broader participation.
First, rigid rules that wipe out shareholders and penalize long-term creditors are a clear deterrent from bankers' point of view.
Working life needs to be lengthened, public pensions are often too generous, labor markets too rigid.
No strong social democratic party in Czechoslovakia could emerge from the rigid Czechoslovak Communist Party.
This means that we should view the economy and society not as rigid hierarchies or mechanical markets, but as networks or webs of life, in which contracts, formal and informal, fulfilled or violated, are the essence of human activity.
Indeed, the Party, having ceased to be a rigid monolith obedient to a single leader, has become dependent on the military for its political legitimacy and to ensure domestic order.
What ultimately led to the collapse of the latest round of negotiations was India's refusal to accept rigid rules that it felt would put India's agricultural smallholders in jeopardy.
Second, it makes relative wages (of, say, manufacturing versus services employees) more rigid, because wage contracts are generally set in euro terms.
If demand is too weak, it can lead to a sharp drop in employment (because wages and prices are rigid in the short term).
Today's crisis indicates that a set of rigid rules allows resourceful financial institutions to mask riskiness in their portfolios or shift things around to make standard risk metrics appear better than they really are.
Iran, Romania, and Liberia illustrate that rigid authoritarian systems cannot withstand the shocks of social, political, or economic change, especially at the pace that characterizes today's world.
But their exclusive, rigid ideology was poorly suited to governing such a large and diverse country.
But it remains to be seen if the lessons have been fully internalized, and whether we will have a kinder, gentler IMF in lieu of a rigid, doctrinaire one.
As always, much will depend on America's readiness to move away from military solutions and rigid ideological imperatives and instead embrace the pragmatic culture of conflict resolution.
The al-Saud religious alliance with the Wahhabis and the latter's control of a rigid religious educational system must change.
Rigid, top-down uniformity is essential in the specification of weights and measures and the issuance of currency and coin.
But in practice, immigration is often not as beneficial as it could be, because the target country has a rigid wage structure that prevents the additional jobs needed to employ the immigrants from being created.
And, with a president who has sometimes openly questioned rigid ideological adherence to free trade, anything is possible, especially in the run-up to the 2012 presidential election.
But the cost of such rigid rules may be high, and their effectiveness, as witnessed by the vagaries of the United States' record on human rights, is less fool-proof than is sometimes imagined.
If immigration countries suffer from chronic unemployment because wages are overly generous and rigid, as seems the case in most West European countries, migrants who find work will simply displace nationals from their jobs.

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