tightly
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
tight/tʌɪt/
▶adjective
- 1 fixed or fastened firmly; hard to move, undo, or open.
■ (of clothes) close-fitting, especially uncomfortably so.
■ (of a grip) very firm.
■ well sealed against something such as water or air.
- 2 (of a rope, fabric, or surface) stretched so as to leave no slack.
■ tense: a tight smile.
- 3 (of a form of control) strictly imposed: security was tight at the ceremony.
- 4 (of a written work or form) concise.
- 5 (of an organization or group) disciplined or well coordinated.
- 6 (of an area or space) allowing little room for manoeuvre.
■ (of money or time) limited; restricted: a tight deadline.
- 7 secretive.
- 8 Brit. informal not willing to spend or give much money; mean.
- 9 informal drunk.
– phrases
a tight ship a strictly controlled and disciplined organization or operation.
a tight corner (or spot or place) a difficult situation.
a tight ship a strictly controlled and disciplined organization or operation.
a tight corner (or spot or place) a difficult situation.
– derivatives
tighten verb,
tightly adverb,
tightness noun.
tighten verb,
tightly adverb,
tightness noun.
– origin ME (in the sense ‘healthy, vigorous’, later ‘firm, solid’): prob. an alt. of thight ‘firm, solid’, later ‘close-packed, dense’, of Gmc origin.
'tightly' also found in these Oxford entries:
aglet
- armlock
- bind
- box turtle
- clamp
- clasp
- clench
- cling
- clutch
- constrain
- corset
- felt-tip pen
- fist
- flabby
- frap
- frizz
- gripe
- hang
- hold
- hug
- intense
- jam
- krimmer
- ligation
- ligature
- limpet
- loose
- Persian lamb
- pinch
- plug
- pompom
- pucker
- roll
- ruck
- skinny-rib
- slack
- stretch
- stuff
- Thai stick
- tight
- tight-knit
- trismus
- truss
- twist
- wasp waist
- wedgie
- whipcord
- white-knuckle
- wring

