: to change (a material, such as cartilage) into bone
ossified tendons of muscle
2
: to make rigidly conventional and opposed to change
ossified institutions
ossified ideologies
Did you know?
The skeletons of mammals originate as soft cartilage that gradually transforms into hard bone (in humans, the process begins in the womb and continues until late adolescence). This bone-building process has been called ossification since the late 17th century, and the verb ossify arrived soon after the noun. Both terms have come to refer to figurative types of hardening, such as that of the heart, mind, or soul. The words come from the Latin root os, meaning "bone." Os has also entered English as a synonym of bone in scientific contexts.
Did you know?
What is the difference between ossify and calcify?
Medically speaking, ossify refers to the process by which bone forms, or by which tissue (usually cartilage) changes into bone. Ossification is a natural process that starts in utero and which comprises several different steps—one of which is the deposit of calcium salts, also known as calcification. Calcify, however, only refers to the deposit of calcium salts in soft tissue and is not synonymous with ossify. Ossification creates bone tissue, which is more than simply a deposit of calcium salts.
Both ossify and calcify have gained more general uses as well. Calcify refers to hardening, to becoming inflexible and unable to change:
What were once upstart revisionist currents calcified into self-regarding academic sub-specialties, sponsoring plenty of analysis but little fundamental debate. — Sean Wilentz, The New Republic, 2 July 2001
Ossify refers to becoming inflexible, conventional, and resistant to change:
For these writers, the ossified ideologies of the world, imbedded in the communal imagination, block vision, and as artists they respond not by criticism from without but by confrontation from within. —Robert Coover, The New York Times Book Review, 18 Mar. 1984
While ossify generally has a slightly more disparaging connotation to it than calcify does in general uses, our evidence shows that the two words are beginning to merge semantically.
Example Sentences
The cartilage will ossify, becoming bone. a disease that ossifies the joints
Recent Examples on the WebAt the end of the summer, the antlers ossify, and elk scrape the velvet off on trees.The New Yorker, 7 Mar. 2022 While that belief is beginning to ossify among Republicans, a divide is brewing over Trump’s role in the party. Bryan Schott, The Salt Lake Tribune, 13 Sep. 2021 Nadal, who has a longstanding foot problem because his navicular bone did not correctly ossify during childhood, was upbeat about his progress after his loss to Harris. Ben Rothenberg, New York Times, 12 Aug. 2021 But: There is a risk that over time a firm’s social capital erodes, creativity flags, hierarchies ossify and team spirit fades, as Mr Hastings fears. Daniel Tenreiro, National Review, 16 Sep. 2020 Revelations that at first seemed fatally poisonous to the presidency gradually ossified in Washington’s atmosphere.Washington Post, 6 Feb. 2020 But once a baby takes its first breaths, its bone-forming cells are hard at work to ossify that cartilage—or turn it into sturdier bone—and join all the pieces together. Alex Schwartz, Popular Science, 5 Feb. 2020 What started in part as an effort in 1958 to break up cop and firefighter unions in Charlotte soon ossified into a state law covering all public employees. Nick Martin, The New Republic, 31 Jan. 2020 Unlike many people of their generation, Helen and Brice have not ossified in their emeritus years. Douglas Friedman, Town & Country, 22 Oct. 2018 See More