- obdurately
- ob·du·rate·ly
English syllables. 2014.
English syllables. 2014.
obdurately — obdurate ► ADJECTIVE ▪ stubbornly refusing to change one s opinion or course of action. DERIVATIVES obduracy noun obdurately adverb obdurateness noun. ORIGIN Latin obduratus, from durare harden … English terms dictionary
Obdurately — Obdurate Ob du*rate, a. [L. obduratus, p. p. of obdurare to harden; ob (see Ob )+ durare to harden, durus hard. See {Dure}.] 1. Hardened in feelings, esp. against moral or mollifying influences; unyielding; hard hearted; stubbornly wicked. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
obdurately — adverb see obdurate … New Collegiate Dictionary
obdurately — See obdurate. * * * … Universalium
obdurately — adverb In an obdurate manner; stubbornly, intractably or inflexibly … Wiktionary
obdurately — É‘bdjÉ™rÉ™tlɪ / É’bdjÊŠr adv. in a stubborn manner … English contemporary dictionary
obdurately — See: obdurate … English dictionary
obdurately — adverb in a stubborn unregenerate manner she remained stubbornly in the same position • Syn: ↑stubbornly, ↑pig headedly, ↑mulishly, ↑obstinately, ↑cussedly • Derived from adjective: ↑cussed … Useful english dictionary
obdurate — obdurately, adv. obdurateness, n. /ob doo rit, dyoo /, adj. 1. unmoved by persuasion, pity, or tender feelings; stubborn; unyielding. 2. stubbornly resistant to moral influence; persistently impenitent: an obdurate sinner. [1400 50; late ME… … Universalium
mumpsimus — n. view obdurately held even when proven wrong; one who obdurately holds an erroneous belief; an inaccurate word or spelling which has become formally absorbed into a language through frequent usage … English contemporary dictionary