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Rigid   /rˈɪdʒəd/  /rˈɪdʒɪd/   Listen
Rigid

adjective
1.
Incapable of or resistant to bending.  Synonym: stiff.  "A table made of rigid plastic" , "A palace guardsman stiff as a poker" , "Stiff hair" , "A stiff neck"
2.
Incapable of compromise or flexibility.  Synonym: strict.
3.
Incapable of adapting or changing to meet circumstances.  Synonyms: inflexible, unbending.  "An inflexible law" , "An unbending will to dominate"
4.
Designating an airship or dirigible having a form maintained by a stiff unyielding frame or structure.
5.
Fixed and unmoving.  Synonyms: fixed, set.  "His bearded face already has a set hollow look" , "A face rigid with pain"



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"Rigid" Quotes from Famous Books



... a catch of her breath. In suspense he watched her angry struggle to regain control of herself. She sat bolt upright, rigid; her birthmark showed a fiery red. In a few ...
— His Family • Ernest Poole

... cannily engineered into her father's favor a young man of pleasing appearance, good title and fortune, but quite without character behind his fierce upstanding mustache. Inheriting her father's rigid will, she had kept the young officer in a state of abject submission. She stroked his hair in public as if he had been her pet dachshund, and patted his hand at kindly intervals as had he been ...
— The White Morning • Gertrude Atherton

... crystals or incrust the urine, or it may precipitate a material having the appearance of brick-dust, and sometimes semen tinged with blood. The dyspeptic symptoms when present are followed by diarrhea. The limbs are cramped and rigid, the feet bloated, and the patient becomes melancholy and relinquishes all hope of recovery. As the disease progresses, the patient lacks firmness and ...
— The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser in Plain English • R. V. Pierce

... times with the prophetic eye of a poet. In his rambles about the environs of Paris he was struck with the immense quantities of game running about almost in a tame state; and saw in those costly and rigid preserves for the amusement and luxury of the privileged few a sure "badge of the slavery of the people." This slavery he predicted was drawing toward a close. "When I consider that these parliaments, the members of which are all created by the court, and the presidents ...
— Oliver Goldsmith • Washington Irving

... principally that of Dolbear and Edison. Dolbear's thought is illustrated in Fig. 7. Two conducting plates are brought close together. One is free to vibrate as a diaphragm, while the other is fixed. The element 1 in Fig. 7 is merely a stud to hold rigid the plate it bears against. Each of two instruments connected by a line contains such a pair of plates, and a battery in the line keeps them charged to its potential. The two diaphragms of each instrument are kept drawn towards each other because their unlike charges attract each ...
— Cyclopedia of Telephony & Telegraphy Vol. 1 - A General Reference Work on Telephony, etc. etc. • Kempster Miller


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