/stɪf/
OriginFrom Middle English stiff, stiffe, stif, from Old English stīf, from Proto-West Germanic *stīf, from Proto-Germanic *stīfaz, from Proto-Indo-European *steypós.
See also West Frisian stiif, Dutch stijf, Norwegian Bokmål stiv, German steif; also Latin stīpes, stīpō, from which English stevedore.
The expected Modern English form would be /staɪf/; /stɪf/ is probably originally from compounds such as stiffly, where the vowel was shortened before a consonant cluster.
- Rigid; hard to bend; inflexible.
““A tight little craft,” was Austin’s invariable comment on the matron;[…]. ¶ Near her wandered her husband, orientally bland, invariably affable, and from time to time squinting sideways, as usual, in”
“You have discovered the corpse of Captain Willem of the MSV Majesty. His stiff fingers are wrapped tightly around a small datapad.”
- figurativelyInflexible; rigid.
- Formal in behavior; unrelaxed.
- colloquialHarsh, severe.
“He was eventually caught, and given a stiff fine.”
““Yes. I believe she has passed quite a stiff exam.””
“To fit them for heavy loads on gradients as stiff as 1 in 45 in tropical conditions, these Class 90 diesels embody several unusual features, [...].”
- Painful or more rigid than usual as a result of excessive or unaccustomed exercise.
“My legs are stiff after climbing that hill yesterday.”
- Potent.
“a stiff drink; a stiff dose; a stiff breeze”
“[Badminton] was popular in India because of the climate, where it was played outdoors, but in England the stiff breezes made it impossible to play without heavily loaded shuttlecocks.”
“In the end, perhaps these deflections are easier than confronting the reality and debunking some of the less helpful stories a certain section of England likes to tell about itself. Much easier to jus”
- informalExpensive, pricey.
“He had the practised face of a dealer also. But he was a Jew and chaffering was in his blood, and he said, "A bit stiff, isn't it? I mean without a guarantee that it's by the original maker?"”
- informalDead, deceased.
- slangErect.
“Adieu! faint-hearted instrument of lust; / That falselie hath betrayde our equale trust. / Hence-forth no more will I implore thine ayde, / Or thee, or man of cowardize upbrayde. / My little dilldo sh”
- Having a dense consistency; thick; (by extension) Difficult to stir.
“Adding too much peanut butter to your Peanut Sauce recipe may cause your sauce to turn out too stiff.”
- Beaten until so aerated that they stand up straight on their own.
“beat the egg whites until they are stiff”
- Of an equation, for which certain numerical solving methods are numerically unstable, unless the step size is taken to be extremely small.
- Keeping upright.
- Of a shot, landing so close to the flagstick that it should be very easy to sink the ball with the next shot.
“I go all out, go for the long ball, the stiff shots to the pin, aim for the back of the cup.”
- Delivered more forcefully than needed, whether intentionally or accidentally, thus causing legitimate pain to the opponent.
- Canada, US, countable, slang, uncountableAn average person, usually male, of no particular distinction, skill, or education.
“working stiff”
“The clerk shrugged: “That's the boss's little girl.” “Why, the lucky stiff!” said Keating. “He's been holding out on me.” “You misunderstood me,” the clerk said coldly. “It's his daughter. It's Domini”
- countable, slang, uncountableA person who is deceived, as a mark or pigeon in a swindle.
“She convinced the stiff to go to her hotel room, where her henchman was waiting to rob him.”
- countable, slang, uncountableA cadaver; a dead person.
“This parrot is no more! It has ceased to be! It's expired and gone to meet its maker! This is a late parrot! It's a stiff! Bereft of life, it rests in peace! If you hadn't nailed it to the perch it wo”
- countable, slang, uncountableA flop; a commercial failure.
“If the movie was a stiff it wasn't any of their specific faults. They were all in it together and they were jobbed in and jobbed out for two weeks and gone and they got a pile of money for their effor”
“They never did sell any records. I don't mean they didn't sell 100,000. I mean they didn't sell 5000. Total. National. Coast-to-coast. The record was a stiff.”
- US, countable, slang, uncountableA person who leaves (especially a restaurant) without paying the bill.
- US, broadly, countable, slang, uncountableA customer who does not leave a tip.
- countable, uncountableAny hard hand where it is possible to exceed 21 by drawing an additional card.
- countable, slang, uncountableNegotiable instruments, possibly forged.
- countable, slang, uncountableA note or letter surreptitiously sent by an inmate.
- To fail to pay that which one owes (implicitly or explicitly) to another, especially by departing hastily.
“He stiffed me on the tip.”
“Realizing he had forgotten his wallet, he stiffed the taxi driver when the cab stopped for a red light.”
“We asked one girl to explain how she felt when she was "stiffed." She said, You think of all the work you've done and how you've tried to please [them…].”
- To cheat someone.
“You see, poor Nonie really was stiffed by Adolph in his will. He really stiffed her, Rose, and I really wanted to right that wrong.”
“The Donald moved on to how he had spent £100m on expensive plywood while renovating the golf club. The Scottish tradesmen must have seen him coming. It looks like Trump has been stiffed. So much for t”
- To tip ungenerously.
“Then he stiffed the waiter with a cheap tip.”
- slangTo kill.
“But you know it could be a hassle / Trying to explain myself to a police officer / About how it was your old lady got herself stiffed”
- informalTo be unsuccessful.
“"Come To Me" moved but a few to buy a copy; "My Queen" stiffed in the stall.”
- Of the wind, with great force; strongly.
“At Feversham was a very High Tide in the Afternoon, tho' the Wind was Southerly, and blew very stiff, which the Seamen there wondered at.”
“It soon blew stiff, & we scudded before it under double-reefed topsails, & mainsail hauled up.”
“At about 11.30 am it rained tremendously and blew very stiff.”
Formsstiffer(comparative) · stiffest(superlative) · stiffs(plural) · stiffs(present, singular, third-person) · stiffing(participle, present) · stiffed(participle, past) · stiffed(past) · more stiff(comparative) · most stiff(superlative) · Stiffs(plural)