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The phrase "it's stuffy" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe an environment that feels warm, humid, or lacking in fresh air.
Example: "I can't concentrate in this room; it's stuffy and uncomfortable."
Alternatives: "it's cramped" or "it's suffocating."
Exact(8)
That it's stuffy and strict?
It's stuffy, it's boring and it doesn't stand for what it's actually about: a deep emotional experience that will stick in your memory much longer than any movie or any party.
It's stuffy and fatuous, of course, to call running a hotel a labor of love.
I know it's stuffy in here, but it's better than actively being rained on.
It's stuffy and hot, but surprisingly doesn't smell, and the heterogeneous mix of species shine in lurid yellow, orange and blue mood lighting.
It's stuffy, rubbish is strewn on the floor, and in the outdoor courtyard offers hardly any shelter from the harsh sun.
Similar(52)
Last year, the British critic Philip Clark had a provocative response to the perennial question of how to save classical music from its so-called image problem the perception that it is stuffy, élitist, and irrelevant.
And I realised it was stuffy service.
(Twenty years ago it was stuffy beyond belief).
It is stuffy, the windows closed, and the air tangy with sweat.
In the car, it was stuffy and slightly disgustingly cozy, the wipers going, the windows steaming up.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com