Ridged in a sentence as an adjective

The more ridged & complex the context, the more the reader has to deny self.

You don't use marching cubes if you want that ridged low-res voxel effect.

Imagine all the popular computers at that time were as ridged and closed as iOS is now.

Staring at the circles had a very odd mental effect for me. After playing a few rounds other websites I look at seems very square, straight, and ridged.

The Samsung clone and the Apple original both have "Smart" in the name, both have ridged covers, and both come in pastel colors.

It's a small stick pointing outwards from the dashboard moving inside a ridged groove which lets you set it at one of several discrete inclinations.

Could you just claim it isn't a building but rather a "ridged tent", and cite the quick disassemble/reassemble capability as evidence of that?

He may not be the most agreeable person, but when you have an environment that becomes incredibly ridged its kinda nice to see people like him out there.

Tried to leave this comment on the target page where there is discussion of smoothing the ridged surface:There's another option for a smooth finish, or a finish with a different texture: stucco.

Resumes, although varying aesthetically contain a pretty ridged structure that presents itself well to localized extraction.

Does anyone know the specification of what makes the difference between a person free falling and a person in a vehicle free falling?I know this seems specific, but lets say for example the space suit is completely ridged, and made out of metal, would he still qualify?I'm basically trying to figure out exactly what the point of gear is that moves it from skydive to vehicular fall.

Ridged definitions

adjective

having a ridge or shaped like a ridge or suggesting the keel of a ship; "a carinate sepal"

See also: carinate carinated keeled