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Synonyms for tighter
Grammar : Adj |
Spell : tahyt |
Phonetic Transcription : taɪt |
Top 10 synonyms for tighter Other synonyms for the word tighter
- arduous
- blind
- blocked
- bolted
- boozy
- bound
- buzzed
- choking
- clasped
- close
- close-fitting
- clumped
- constricted
- contracted
- cramping
- critical
- crowded
- crushing
- cutting
- dangerous
- dense
- distressing
- disturbing
- drawn
- drunk
- drunken
- enduring
- established
- exacting
- fastened
- firm
- fixed
- grasping
- hazardous
- hermetic
- hermetically sealed
- hidebound
- impenetrable
- impermeable
- impervious
- inebriated
- invulnerable
- loaded
- locked
- mean
- miserly
- nailed
- near
- obstructed
- padlocked
- parsimonious
- penny-pinching
- penurious
- perilous
- pickled
- pinching
- plastered
- plugged
- proof
- punishing
- rigid
- rough
- secure
- set
- short
- shrunken
- shut
- skintight
- slammed
- smashed
- smothering
- snapped
- solid
- sound
- sparing
- stable
- steady
- stewed
- sticky
- stiff
- stoned
- stopped up
- strained
- stretched
- strong
- sturdy
- taut
- tenacious
- tense
- thick
- ticklish
- tied
- tied up
- tightened
- tightfisted
- tipsy
- tough
- tricky
- trying
- unbending
- uncomfortable
- under the influence
- unyielding
- upsetting
- watertight
- worrisome
Définition of tighter
Origin :- mid-15c., "dense, close, compact," from Middle English thight, from Old Norse þettr "watertight, close in texture, solid," from Proto-Germanic *thenkhtuz (cf. second element in Old English meteþiht "stout from eating;" Middle High German dihte "dense, thick," German dicht "dense, tight," Old High German gidigan, German gediegen "genuine, solid, worthy"), from PIE root *tenk- "to become firm, curdle, thicken" (cf. Irish techt "curdled, coagulated," Lithuanian tankus "close, tight," Persian tang "tight," Sanskrit tanakti "draws together, contracts").
- Sense of "drawn, stretched" is from 1570s; meaning "fitting closely" (as of garments) is from 1779; that of "evenly matched" (of a contest, bargain, etc.) is from 1828, American English; that of "drunk" is from 1830; that of "close, sympathetic" is from 1956. Tight-assed "unwilling to relax" is attested from 1903. Tight-laced is recorded from 1741 in both the literal and figurative senses. Tight-lipped is first attested 1876.
- adj close, snug
- adj sealed
- adj stingy
- adj difficult, troublesome
- adj intoxicated
- The more he pulled and tugged the tighter they seemed to become.
- Extract from : « Tom Swift and his Electric Runabout » by Victor Appleton
- I don't know whether you have ever been in a tighter corner than that, Bertie.
- Extract from : « The Stark Munro Letters » by J. Stark Munro
- Why, yes, I did hear that they were in a tighter box than ever, financially.
- Extract from : « Cap'n Warren's Wards » by Joseph C. Lincoln
- But they only clung the tighter, and now threw their arms about each other.
- Extract from : « Astounding Stories of Super-Science, August 1930 » by Various
- But she only held her the tighter; he only grinned the more.
- Extract from : « The Twins of Suffering Creek » by Ridgwell Cullum
- So they were, and it grew tighter and tighter as they went on.
- Extract from : « Two Arrows » by William O. Stoddard
- She folded the scarf again about her, tighter, it seemed, than it was before.
- Extract from : « The Prisoner » by Alice Brown
- It grasps the article firmly, and the heavier the weight the tighter is its grasp.
- Extract from : « Practical Mechanics for Boys » by J. S. Zerbe
- The smaller the group the tighter its stranglehold over your life and activities.
- Extract from : « The Legacy of Greece » by Various
- But the more she tossed the tighter she enmeshed herself in the web.
- Extract from : « The Adventures of Maya the Bee » by Waldemar Bonsels
Antonyms for tighter
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019