Rigorous - Wikipedia-style Article
Rigorous
Definition
Rigorous is an adjective meaning (1) extremely thorough, exact, or accurate; (2) strict or demanding in standards, rules, or discipline; (3) harsh or severe in conditions; and (4) in mathematics, logic, or science, adhering precisely to formal principles or proofs.
Parts of Speech
Pronunciation
American English
- IPA: /ˈrɪɡərəs/
- Respelling: RIH-guh-russ
British English
- IPA: /ˈrɪɡ(ə)rəs/
- Respelling: RIH-guh-rəs
Etymology
Late Middle English: via Old French rigoreus (modern rigoureux) from Latin rīgōrōsus “stiff, severe,” from rīgōr “stiffness, severity.” Related to English rigor/rigour.
Derivatives
- rigor (US) / rigour (UK) (noun) — strictness; exactness; a high standard of accuracy
- rigorously (adverb) — in a rigorous manner
- rigorousness (noun) — the quality of being rigorous
- rigorism (noun) — a tendency toward strictness in moral or doctrinal matters
Synonyms
- thorough
- exacting
- stringent
- meticulous
- strict
- precise
- scrupulous
- exhaustive
Antonyms
- lax
- lenient
- casual
- slack
- inexact
- superficial
Usage
Adjective: “All materials underwent rigorous testing before release.” / “Admission standards are rigorous.” / “The expedition endured rigorous winter conditions.” / “Provide a rigorous mathematical proof, not just an example.”
Related Terms
- Methodology: A system of methods whose quality is judged by rigor and reproducibility.
- Robustness: Reliability of results under varied assumptions; often pursued alongside rigor.
- Verification/Validation: Processes that establish rigor in engineering and research.
- Proof: A formal demonstration ensuring mathematical rigor.
- Due diligence: Thorough review or investigation, emphasizing rigor.
- Rigor mortis: Physiological “rigor” meaning muscular stiffening after death (etymologically related).
- Contrast with vigorous: Vigorous means energetic or forceful; rigorous means strict or exact.
Detailed Definitions
Adjective
- Extremely thorough and accurate — emphasizing completeness and attention to detail.
- Example: “A rigorous audit uncovered several inconsistencies.”
- Strict or demanding in standards — enforcing rules or quality criteria without compromise.
- Example: “The lab maintains rigorous safety protocols.”
- Harsh or severe (of conditions) — physically or mentally challenging environments.
- Example: “Training took place under rigorous desert heat.”
- (Mathematics/Logic/Science) Formally precise — following exact definitions, axioms, and proofs.
- Example: “Provide a rigorous argument using epsilon–delta definitions.”