Inflexible in a sentence as an adjective

" Once a woman does have a child, she adds, the long, inflexible hours become unmanageable.

Makes me wish people weren't so inflexible about the tiniest UI differences.

This is both a strength and a weakness, as it results in a uniform yet inflexible systems interface.

The ones at the time often took too large a chunk of the revenue or were designed for low volume/were very inflexible.

Just this morning I quit a job partly because of the hilarious hours and how inflexible our executive team was about them.

It implies that these people are irrational, inflexible and idealistic, but with a bad connotation.

Massive proportions of their costs are in Japan and inflexible but their income is significantly in dollars and euros.

While it has benefits for creating stable communities it also creates an inflexible labour market as people won't move to where the jobs are.

There is nothing inherently right or efficient about it, and it's the oldest and most inflexible of the man-made institutions, behind Comcast.

They claimed he was "inflexible" about what he'd work on, when it was a very visible matter of written record that he'd very productively work on just about anything.

Android is also inflexible in many ways regarding having a local easy to use file system etc. I personally can't wait to get off Android and onto Ubuntu mobile or Firefox OS.

It also happens to mean that you can test it without requiring the linguistic flexibility provided by Ruby, but that doesn't mean that testability in inflexible languages is the only reason why it's the right thing to do.

If Sony has it, they may be unwilling to change, but maybe the family?If an inflexible conglomerate already has it, what can we learn from them about getting the owners of rights to culturally important copyrighted works first?

It's rarely perfect in the first iteration but they can see how doing this makes them more productive, and it beats getting a bunch of confused requirements from confused business owners, or working off cumbersome and inflexible product requirement documents.

Inflexible definitions

adjective

incapable of change; "a man of inflexible purpose"

adjective

not making concessions; "took an uncompromising stance in the peace talks"; "uncompromising honesty"

See also: uncompromising sturdy

adjective

resistant to being bent; "an inflexible iron bar"; "an inflexible knife blade";

adjective

incapable of adapting or changing to meet circumstances; "a rigid disciplinarian"; "an inflexible law"; "an unbending will to dominate"

See also: rigid unbending