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Stubborn   /stˈəbərn/   Listen
Stubborn

adjective
1.
Tenaciously unwilling or marked by tenacious unwillingness to yield.  Synonyms: obstinate, unregenerate.
2.
Not responding to treatment.  Synonym: refractory.  "A refractory case of acne" , "Stubborn rust stains"



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"Stubborn" Quotes from Famous Books



... The formal garden, the Georgian conservatory, the park, the river, the church—they breathed England and the traditional English life. All that they implied, of custom and inheritance, of strength and narrowness, of cramping prejudice and stubborn force, was very familiar to Ashe, and on the whole very congenial. He was glad to be an Englishman and a member of an English government. The ironic mood which was tolerably constant in him did not in the least ...
— The Marriage of William Ashe • Mrs. Humphry Ward

... up the weary grade A yearling Calf was leading. The creature was a stubborn jade And ...
— The Slant Book • Peter Newell

... Willy earnestly and raised his finger chidingly. "Willy," he said, "you've got that stubborn little head of yours set again. How often have I told you that it is not becoming for you to insist on having your own way. No, you cannot climb up to the dome under any ...
— The Shipwreck - A Story for the Young • Joseph Spillman

... nineteenth century. He was a Tory and a staunch follower of the younger Pitt, who rewarded his services with a baronetcy in 1800. He too was a typical man of his age and class, an age of material progress and expansion, a class full of self-confidence and animated by a spirit of stubborn resistance to so-called un-English ideas. His eldest son, the third Robert and the second baronet, is our subject. It is impossible to grasp the springs of his conduct unless we know what traditions he inherited ...
— Victorian Worthies - Sixteen Biographies • George Henry Blore

... and a newcomer little knows that the success or failure of every operation he can conceive depends not upon generalship, but upon the confirmation of a vast country. Our generals, with this in mind and with fewer men, could make all your schemes miscarry. Had the English soldiers not been of such stubborn stuff, we should have been victors from the first. Our leader was not General Washington but General America, and his brigadiers were forests, swamps, ...
— The Moon Endureth--Tales and Fancies • John Buchan


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