priggish

Example Sentences

Recent Examples of Synonyms for priggish
Adjective
  • Samsung includes a staid flat black set with the TV, and white and wood-textured bezels are available for purchase separately.
    PC Magazine, PC Magazine, 14 Apr. 2025
  • While the stock market was in the midst of yet another meltdown, the normally staid bond market began to gyrate wildly.
    Laurent Belsie, Christian Science Monitor, 11 Apr. 2025
Adjective
  • The only real originality in the accounts of Jesus’ virgin birth is their distinctly Jewish and prudish tone, with the impregnation dignified and at arm’s length rather than represented, as in the Hellenistic myths, as a shower of gold or the lovemaking of an amorous swan.
    Adam Gopnik, The New Yorker, 24 Mar. 2025
  • The Comstock Act is a relic, not just of a more prudish era in American history, but of an age when the sort of individual rights that modern Americans take for granted effectively did not exist.
    Ian Millhiser, Vox, 27 May 2024
Adjective
  • Then again, the same could be said for all of MLB, which is considered stuffier than the NFL and NBA.
    Gary Phillips, New York Daily News, 13 Mar. 2025
  • His Olympic Agenda 2020 did away with some of the IOC’s stuffier traditions and paved the way for the inclusion of trendy urban sports like BMX and breaking at the Games.
    Blythe Lawrence, Forbes, 2 Mar. 2025
Adjective
  • Raising the stakes were the injunctions of the Hays Code, whose puritanical rules demanded that studio filmmakers in Hollywood shy away from depictions of interracial romance.
    Mayukh Sen, The Atlantic, 1 Mar. 2025
  • With their charismatic leadership, organizational skills, puritanical ideology, and internal solidarity, HTS and other militant groups were the unintended beneficiaries.
    Fawaz A. Gerges, Foreign Affairs, 27 Jan. 2025
Adjective
  • Ruby is a mess — chaos, really — whereas AJ is a bit more straitlaced, and there’s a stiff physicality to her.
    Manuel Betancourt, Los Angeles Times, 19 Dec. 2024
  • Garrison plays Trisha, Sam’s straitlaced sister who’s undergone major growth as well.
    Alison Herman, Variety, 9 Dec. 2024
Adjective
  • For Dry, this challenges some common ideas about the Victorian centralization of scientific institutions.
    Danny Robb, JSTOR Daily, 14 Apr. 2025
  • Stroll along German Street to marvel at centuries-old Victorian structures and pop into specialty shops.
    Tara Massouleh McCay, Southern Living, 13 Apr. 2025
Adjective
  • Victoria prefers things prim and respectable.
    Amanda Whiting, Vulture, 9 Mar. 2025
  • This place defines prim and proper.
    Amanda Nguyen, TIME, 3 Mar. 2025
Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.

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Cite this Entry

“Priggish.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/priggish. Accessed 22 Apr. 2025.

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