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    stifling
    /ˈstʌɪflɪŋ/

    adjective

    • 1. (of heat, air, or a room) very hot and causing difficulties in breathing; suffocating: "stifling heat"
    • 2. making one feel constrained or oppressed: "the stifling formality of her family life"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. STIFLING definition: 1. extremely hot and unpleasant: 2. preventing something from happening: 3. extremely hot and…. Learn more.

  3. 1. a. : to withhold from circulation or expression. stifled our anger. b. : to cut off (the voice, the breath, etc.) c. : deter, discourage. 2. a (1) : muffle. (2) : smother. b. : to kill by depriving of oxygen : suffocate. intransitive verb. : to be or become unable to breathe easily. stifling in the heat.

  4. making you feel trapped and unable to do or say what you want. At 25, she found family life stifling. Check pronunciation: stifling. Definition of stifling adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  5. Stifling definition: suffocating; oppressively close. See examples of STIFLING used in a sentence.

  6. 1. adjective. Stifling heat is so intense that it makes you feel uncomfortable. You can also use stifling to describe a place that is extremely hot. The stifling heat of the little room was beginning to make me nauseous. Synonyms: suffocating, close, oppressive, airless More Synonyms of stifling. 2. adjective.

  7. Something stifling makes you feel suffocated. If your mother insists on accompanying you on your first date, that will probably feel stifling.

  8. sti·fling. (stī′flĭng) adj. 1. Very hot or stuffy: The air was stifling in the closed room. 2. Inhibiting, stultifying, or oppressive: "The scholarly correctness of our age can be stifling" (Annalyn Swan). sti′fling·ly adv. American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition.

  9. Stifling definition: suffocating; oppressively close. See examples of STIFLING used in a sentence.

  10. stifling. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English stif‧ling /ˈstaɪflɪŋ/ adjective 1 a room or weather that is stifling is very hot and uncomfortable, so that it seems difficult to breathe a stifling, crowded train the stifling heat of the tropics 2 a situation that is stifling stops you from developing your own ideas and character ...

  11. To stifle is to cut off, hold back, or smother. You may stifle your cough if you don't want to interrupt a lecture or you may stifle the competition if you fear losing. The verb stifle means “to choke, suffocate, drown.”. It can describe a claustrophobic feeling, like getting smothered by kisses from your great aunt.