Definitionadj. stubbornly conservative and narrow-minded
Last update: October 10, 2015
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Instead it has been hidebound by bureaucracy according to the authors of the report. [Please select]
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It has been argued somewhat convincingly that Radio Drama tended to be hidebound by the conventions and codes of conventional theater and dramatic narrative. [Please select]
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The young couple led a somewhat dreary life, hidebound by court etiquette, which Victor Emmanuel hated. [Please select]
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He has seen more of this life and--oh, he's not so terribly hidebound. [Please select]
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A beginning must be made where opinions are least hidebound and are therefore easiest to change. [Please select]
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The animal, as a rule, is emaciated, has a staring coat, and is hidebound. [Please select]
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The coat is dull and rough and the skin dry and hidebound. [Please select]
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Of course, it was a great thing to be free from the narrowness and prejudice in which Old Chester was absolutely hidebound. [Please select]
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The merest word would sometimes be enough to put you on the right track; and that word the books, hidebound in a regulation phraseology, never give you. [Please select]
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