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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
stodgy
adjective
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Stress, lack of rest and too much stodgy food had made Pauline break out in spots.
▪ the stodgy banking industry
▪ The food in Suzie's Cafe tends to be stodgy rather than fresh and light.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ As usual when dealing with her, the poor old royals and their stodgy advisers were left in the dust.
▪ It was a little stodgy, a little old-fashioned.
▪ Much existing self-build is stodgy and dull.
▪ So the stodgy respectability of the official state cinema becomes leavened with curious characters.
▪ Supposedly, this nomination shows that stodgy, old academy voters are hipper, less traditional, younger.
▪ The stodgy strands were long and thick and twisted, spotted with mobile gobbets of ketchup.
▪ This contrasts greatly with another professional publication that I receive which is stodgy and insists on corresponding via an employer's address.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Stodgy

Stodgy \Stodg"y\, a. Wet. [Prov. Eng.]
--G. Eliot.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
stodgy

1823, "thick, semi-solid," from stodge "to stuff, satiate" (1670s), of unknown origin, perhaps somehow imitative. Meaning "dull, heavy" developed by 1874 from use in reference to food (1841).

Wiktionary
stodgy

a. 1 (context of food English) having a thick, semi-solid consistency; glutinous; heavy on the stomach. 2 dull, old-fashioned

WordNet
stodgy
  1. adj. (used pejoratively) out of fashion; old fashioned; "moss-grown ideas about family life" [syn: fogyish, moss-grown, mossy, stick-in-the-mud(p)]

  2. excessively conventional and unimaginative and hence dull; "why is the middle class so stodgy, so utterly without a sense of humor?"; "a stodgy dinner party" [syn: stuffy]

  3. [also: stodgiest, stodgier]

Usage examples of "stodgy".

When she had been hired, albeit on a trial basis due to a lack of solid experience, by the Deseret, she had feared all her interviews would be stodgy old church men.

She lifts him out of his doldrums, saves him from ennui, saves him from his own stodgy self.

Maia recalled the var-trash romance novel she had read back in prison, about a world spun topsy-turvy, in which stodgy clans collapsed along with the stable conditions that had made them thrive, opening fresh niches to be filled by upstart variants.

I wondered when Buckkeep had become so avid for these foreign styles of dress and grudgingly admitted that I resented the changes I saw around me, not only because they eclipsed more and more of the Buckkeep I remembered from my childhood, but also because they made me feel stodgy and old.

Creative misfits of all kinds slipped into the eighty approved artistic modes, including several that were sanctioned to satirize the hidebound and shake up the stodgy.

Then I knew the miracle had passed without my notice, had passed as I copied out some stodgy sentence about Master Gurloes or the Ascian War.

But in this mishmash, like plums in a stodgy pudding, were the hard facts of which Craig stood accused.

Cox, if I remember her dissertation correctly, proposes to prevent this stodgy dephlogistication of marriage by interrupting its course--that is, by separating the parties now and then, so that neither will become too familiar and commonplace to the other.

In business the more stodgy members of Hoxworth & Hale had kept him from assuming any position of leadership within the company, so that even though his sugar lands irrigated by artesian wells flourished and made him a millionaire several times over, he was denied for moral reasons the command of H & H to which his talents entitled him.

Pretty good going for a stodgy young assistant professor of Comparative Literature who up to this night had about as much experience with telepathy as African lion-hunting!

It was through the southern end of this that the traffic was now attempting to pass: a jumble of stodgy towers and lowflung contemporary hutments which stretched along the dual carriageway almost as far as the amiable sanatorium settlement of Bad Godesberg, whose principal industry, having once been bottled water, is now diplomacy.

I don't keep track of every fribbling, stodgy godlet infesting it, nor would I want to.

It was listed as history, not science or religion, and they chose one of the oldest and stodgiest white male members of the history department to teach it.

Remnant of the Santa Monica that had existed between the two population waves that built the beachside city: stodgy Midwestern burghers streaming westward for warmth at the turn of the twentieth century, and, seventy years later, left-leaning social activists taking advantage of the best rent control in California.

There's a party laid on to make even a stodgy spalpeen like you frolic.