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| a children's mummer's parade, as on the Fourth of July, with prizes for the best costumes. |
| a printed punctuation mark (‽), available only in some typefaces, designed to combine the question mark (?) and the exclamation point (!), indicating a mixture of query and interjection, as after a rhetorical question. |
| stiff (stɪf) | |
| —adj | |
| 1. | not easily bent; rigid; inflexible |
| 2. | not working or moving easily or smoothly: a stiff handle |
| 3. | difficult to accept in its severity or harshness: a stiff punishment |
| 4. | moving with pain or difficulty; not supple: a stiff neck |
| 5. | difficult; arduous: a stiff climb |
| 6. | unrelaxed or awkward; formal |
| 7. | firmer than liquid in consistency; thick or viscous |
| 8. | powerful; strong: a stiff breeze; a stiff drink |
| 9. | excessively high: a stiff price |
| 10. | nautical Compare tender (of a sailing vessel) relatively resistant to heeling or rolling |
| 11. | lacking grace or attractiveness |
| 12. | stubborn or stubbornly maintained: a stiff fight |
| 13. | obsolete tightly stretched; taut |
| 14. | slang chiefly (Austral) unlucky |
| 15. | slang intoxicated |
| 16. | stiff upper lip See lip |
| 17. | informal stiff with amply provided with |
| —n | |
| 18. | slang a corpse |
| 19. | slang anything thought to be a loser or a failure; flop |
| —adv | |
| 20. | completely or utterly: bored stiff; frozen stiff |
| —vb | |
| 21. | slang (intr) to fail: the film stiffed |
| 22. | slang chiefly (US) (tr) to cheat or swindle |
| 23. | slang (tr) to kill |
| [Old English stīf; related to Old Norse stīfla to dam up, Middle Low German stīf stiff, Latin stīpēs wooden post, stīpāre to press] | |
| 'stiffish | |
| —adj | |
| 'stiffly | |
| —adv | |
| 'stiffness | |
| —n | |
stiff definition
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