1. firm and stiff: not bending or easily moved into a different shape or position
lengths of rigid plastic pipes
2. inflexible: applied or carried out strictly, with no allowances or exceptions
a rigid set of rules
3. inflexibly adhered to: kept unchanged or strictly adhered to
rigid opinions
4. refusing to change: unwilling to change or adapt behavior, opinions, or attitudes
Despite arguments to the contrary, she remained rigid in her stand
it means that they are fluid-liquid
rigid-hard
A transformation is said to be rigid if it preserves relative distances.
no
Something rigid is stiff and not easily bendable or flexible. It does not easily change shape or position.
(Rigid means inflexible, or stiff, and used metaphorically to mean strict)A popsicle stick is so rigid that it will not bend very much.A set of rigid posts prevents vehicles from using the pedestrian bridge.The school had a rigid code of conduct.
raide is stiff, rigid in English.
Rigid means "stiff" or "devoid of flexibility". So being less frigid would mean being more flexible.
If you mean an octagon then it is an 8 sided polygon
If you mean hard as in the opposite of soft, then rigid, firm, adamatine. If you mean the opposite of easy, then difficult
Neither. Solid can be the least flexible or the most rigid.
Rigid is immovable, unbending. Semi-rigid can move in a limited way.
your being too rigid can end your good relationships
It's open to interpretation, as opposed to being rigid or set in stone.