Tight Definition

tīt
tighter, tightest
adjective
tighter, tightest
Dense.
Webster's New World
So close or compact in structure that water, air, etc. cannot pass through.
A tight boat.
Webster's New World
Of such close construction as to be impermeable.
Cloth tight enough to hold water; warm in our tight little cabin.
American Heritage
Drawn, packed, spaced, etc. closely together.
A tight weave, a tight schedule of events.
Webster's New World
Fixed securely; held firmly; firm.
A tight joint.
Webster's New World
adverb
In a tight manner.
Webster's New World
Firmly; securely.
American Heritage
Soundly.
Good night, sleep tight.
Wiktionary
Snugly or with constriction.
My shoes are laced too tight.
American Heritage
Synonyms:
affix
Not letting (something specified) in or out.
Airtight, watertight.
Webster's New World
verb

(obsolete) To tighten.

Wiktionary
idiom
sit tight
  • to keep one's opinion or position and wait
Webster's New World

Other Word Forms of Tight

Adjective

Base Form:
tight
Comparative:
tighter
Superlative:
tightest

Idioms, Phrasal Verbs Related to Tight

Origin of Tight

  • From Middle English thight, thiht, from Old English *þīht, *þiht (attested in meteþiht) and Old Norse þéttr, both from Proto-Germanic *þinhtaz, from Proto-Indo-European *tenkt- (“dense, thick, tight"), from Proto-Indo-European *ten- (“to stretch, pull"). Cognate with Scots ticht, West Frisian ticht, Danish tæt, Norwegian tett, tjett, Swedish tät, Dutch dicht, German dicht.

    From Wiktionary

  • Middle English dense of Scandinavian origin

    From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition

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