How to Use stodgy in a Sentence
stodgy
adjective-
Welcome to 2021, where the stodgy are no match for the stonky.
— Jason Gay, WSJ, 9 May 2021 -
In all the old movies the ministers’ wives are kind of dowdy and stodgy.
— Lilly Price, Baltimore Sun, 23 Jan. 2023 -
That was the stodgy New York Times headline one spring day in 1954.
— New York Times, 7 Apr. 2021 -
Of course, in that era Wall Street was mostly a stodgy place.
— Jon Talton, The Seattle Times, 7 Aug. 2018 -
And its food, far from being stodgy, is first rate too.
— CNN, 30 July 2021 -
The old, stale, stodgy stuff just isn’t worthy of this chicken.
— Molly Baz, Bon Appétit, 20 Jan. 2020 -
Maybe Curry and the Warriors will regress, get stodgy again.
— Scott Ostler, SFChronicle.com, 1 June 2018 -
His stodgy shoes pump and move over the pedals at the end of his reliable wool legs.
— Katherine Dunn, The New Yorker, 4 May 2020 -
The Crown season 4 soundtrack is far less stodgy this time around.
— Shannon Carlin, refinery29.com, 18 Nov. 2020 -
Financial firms no longer want to be stodgy and stuffy.
— Angela Chan, Forbes, 19 Mar. 2021 -
By the 1980s, those performances would look to most as stodgy and dated.
— Corey Atad, Esquire, 24 July 2017 -
Coats that reach close to the ankle are old-fashioned and stodgy looking.
— Lois Fenton, Arkansas Online, 6 Nov. 2022 -
The piece is a pantomime both between the two women and of the stodgy form of a lecture itself.
— Globe Staff, BostonGlobe.com, 2 Feb. 2023 -
But the Castle also has been depicted as stodgy and out of step with the times.
— chicagotribune.com, 6 Dec. 2020 -
On air, the couple broke from the stodgy, sermon-centric format of their peers.
— Jonathan Merritt, The Atlantic, 24 Sep. 2021 -
The caterpillar is always the stodgy, slow-moving thing confined to the ground.
— Rose Eveleth, WIRED, 31 Dec. 2022 -
Lyric Opera presents a stodgy 42-year-old production borrowed from the Met.
— Deanna Isaacs, Chicago Reader, 6 Feb. 2018 -
Their storied rise in the 1980s was cast as villains to the Boston Celtics and drawn in simple strokes: the cool, Black team standing in the path of the stodgy, white one.
— Kurt Streeter, New York Times, 25 Apr. 2022 -
To this point the film has been admiring of Margrete to a slightly stodgy degree.
— Jessica Kiang, Variety, 16 Dec. 2021 -
But in many ways, the newspaper had grown stodgy and lost its dominance.
— Joe Mozingo, latimes.com, 17 June 2018 -
The military is old, stodgy, always fighting the last war.
— M.l. Cavanaugh, WSJ, 16 Apr. 2018 -
Anyone who feels the Grammy Awards can be stodgy today might want to consider how far the show has come since the 1990s.
— Jem Aswad, Variety, 2 Apr. 2022 -
Golfs have been a bit stodgy in their interior tech, and the graphics are a welcome change.
— Tribune News Service, cleveland, 27 Mar. 2021 -
While some gluten is necessary for the structure of many baked goods, too much will yield a dense, stodgy texture.
— Claire Saffitz, Bon Appétit, 10 Aug. 2023 -
An event at the Avant family home wasn’t a stodgy affair with canapes, friends recalled.
— Laura J. Nelson, Los Angeles Times, 6 Sep. 2023 -
In a stodgy industry, Seefried stands out, tall and even a little glamorous.
— Robb Mandelbaum, New York Times, 4 Jan. 2018 -
Yet where his 117-minute film was light as wedding cake, this series sprawls to ten stodgy episodes: not a night out with the girls, but a hen weekend.
— T.r., The Economist, 12 Aug. 2019 -
But otherwise, downtown was a stodgy precinct of banks, law offices and not much else.
— Campbell Robertson, New York Times, 30 Oct. 2022 -
Many of these book clubs are not the stodgy ones of old, however, featuring wine and crackers in a host’s living room.
— Nathaniel Meyersohn, CNN, 23 Feb. 2024 -
Pious voters have long shunned the centrist CHP, repelled by its rigidly secularist ideology and stodgy, elitist image.
— Ayla Jean Yackley, Foreign Affairs, 12 Apr. 2019
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'stodgy.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
Last Updated: