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obdurate
[ ob-doo-rit, -dyoo- ]
adjective
- unmoved by persuasion, pity, or tender feelings; stubborn; unyielding.
Synonyms: , , , ,
Antonyms: ,
- stubbornly resistant to moral influence; persistently impenitent:
an obdurate sinner.
Synonyms: , ,
Antonyms: ,
obdurate
/ ˈɒʊɪ /
adjective
- not easily moved by feelings or supplication; hardhearted
- impervious to persuasion, esp to moral persuasion
Derived Forms
- ˈDzܰٱ, adverb
- ˈDzܰ, noun
Other Word Forms
- Dzd·ٱ· adverb
- Dzd·ٱ·Ա noun
- ܲ·Dzd·ٱ adjective
- un·Dzd·ٱ· adverb
- un·Dzd·ٱ·Ա noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of obdurate1
Example Sentences
But encountering “Dark” now, something else stands out: There is no way for a viewer to know for certain whether the word is really written on the underside, beneath all that obdurate tonnage.
None of that has immunized the lowly smelt from its most obdurate enemy: partisan folly.
Jordan Clark and Kemar Roach ran down the overs with an obdurate partnership before the former was bowled by Vaughan for a 47-ball duck.
During the New Deal, the most obdurate critics of Franklin Roosevelt’s policies were Democrats — Southern Democrats, to be sure, but his party members nonetheless — while among his most loyal supporters were liberal Republicans.
Its leader, Wayne LaPierre, was the face of obdurate resistance to regulations on firearms.
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