rigidity

/rɪˈdʒɪdɪti/
nounIntermediate
⚙️Engineering
technical

The quality of being stiff or unyielding, resisting deformation or change

Engineers measured the rigidity of the bridge's support beams.

Engineers tested how stiff the bridge's support beams were.

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Often quantified in engineering as a measure of resistance to bending or torsion.

general

Inflexibility in behavior, attitude, or thinking

His rigidity in decision-making frustrated the team.

His inflexibility in making decisions annoyed the team.

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Used metaphorically to describe people or systems that resist change.

technical

A measure of a material's resistance to deformation under stress

The rigidity of steel allows it to support heavy loads.

Steel's stiffness enables it to bear heavy weights.

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In physics, often calculated as the ratio of shear stress to shear strain.

Collocations

structural rigiditythe stiffness of a structure's frameworkmental rigidityinflexibility in thinking or attitudesincrease rigiditymake something stiffer or more inflexible

Synonyms

Antonyms

Related Phrases

rigidity of the spinephrase
stiffness in the back
rigidity of thoughtphrase
inability to consider new ideas

💡Pro Tip

Technical vs. Figurative Use

Rigidity can describe physical stiffness (e.g., materials) or metaphorical inflexibility (e.g., people).

Gold Rule

Context Matters

Always check if rigidity is being used literally (e.g., engineering) or figuratively (e.g., personality).

📖Word Origin

From Latin 'rigiditas', meaning 'stiffness', derived from 'rigidus' (stiff).

📝Usage Notes

In technical contexts, rigidity is often quantified mathematically. In social contexts, it describes resistance to change.

Word Breakdown

rigid
stiff or inflexible
root
+
-ity
quality or state of
suffix
English Dictionary