hidebound

拘泥成规

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

2025-08-10

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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for August 10, 2025 is: hidebound • HYDE-bound  • adjective Someone or something described as hidebound is inflexible and unwilling to accept new or different ideas. // Although somewhat stuffy and strict, the professor did not so completely adhere to hidebound academic tradition that he wouldn’t teach class outside on an especially lovely day. See the entry > Examples: “He was exciting then, different from all the physicists I worked with in the way that he was so broadly educated and interested, not hidebound and literal, as my colleagues were.” — Joe Mungo Reed, Terrestrial History: A Novel, 2025 Did you know? Hidebound has its origins in agriculture. The adjective, which appeared in English in the early 17th century, originally described cattle whose skin, due to illness or poor feeding, clung to the skeleton and could not be pinched, loosened, or worked with the fingers (the adjective followed an earlier noun form referring to this condition). Hidebound was applied to humans too, to describe people afflicted with tight skin. Figurative use quickly followed, first with a meaning of “stingy” or “miserly.” That sense has since fallen out of use, but a second figurative usage, describing people who are rigid or unyielding in their actions or beliefs, lives on in our language today.
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  • Today's word is hidebound, spelled as one word, H-I-D-E-B-O-U-N-D.

  • Hidebound is an adjective.

  • Someone or something described as hidebound is inflexible and unwilling to accept new or different ideas.

  • Here's the word used in a sentence from Terrestrial History, a novel by Joe Mungo Reed.

  • He was exciting then,

  • different from all the physicists I worked with in the way that he was so broadly educated and interested,

  • not hidebound and literal as my colleagues were.

  • The word hidebound has its origins in agriculture.

  • The adjective, which appeared in English in the early 17th century,

  • originally described cattle whose skin,

  • due to illness or poor feeding, clung to the skeleton and could not be pinched,

  • loosened, or worked with the fingers.

  • The adjective followed an earlier noun form referring to this condition.

  • Hidebound was applied to humans, too, to describe people afflicted with tight skin.

  • Figurative use quickly followed, first with a meaning of stingy or miserly.

  • That sense has since fallen out of use, but a second figurative usage,

  • describing people who are rigid or unyielding in their actions or beliefs,

  • lives on in our language today.

  • With your Word of the Day, I'm Peter Sokolowski.

  • Visit Merriam-Webster.com today for definitions, wordplay, and trending word lookups.