- contrarious
- [kənʹtre(ə)rıəs] a редк.
1. упрямый, несговорчивый2. вредный, пагубный, неблагоприятный
Новый большой англо-русский словарь. 2001.
Новый большой англо-русский словарь. 2001.
Contrarious — Con*tra ri*ous, a. [LL. contrariosus: cf. OF. contrarios contralius.] Showing contrariety; repugnant; perverse. [Archaic] Milton. [1913 Webster] She flew contrarious in the face of God. Mrs. Browning. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
contrarious — index adverse (opposite), contradictory, discordant, hostile, lawless Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
contrarious — [kən trer′ē əs] adj. [ME < ML contrariosus < L contrarius] Now Chiefly Dial. contrary; esp., perverse … English World dictionary
contrarious — adjective Date: 13th century perverse, antagonistic … New Collegiate Dictionary
contrarious — contrariously, adv. contrariousness, n. /keuhn trair ee euhs/, adj. 1. Chiefly Appalachian. perverse; refractory. 2. Archaic. adverse; unfavorable. [1250 1300; ME ( < AF) < L contrarius CONTRARY; see OUS] * * * … Universalium
contrarious — noun a) Tending to counter, oppose, resist, argue. b) Harmful, vexatious. Syn: contradictory, lippy, refractory, willful … Wiktionary
contrarious — (Roget s Thesaurus II) adjective Given to acting in opposition to others: balky, contrary, difficult, froward, impossible, ornery, perverse, wayward. See ATTITUDE, SUPPORT … English dictionary for students
contrarious — con·trar·i·ous … English syllables
contrarious — con•trar•i•ous [[t]kənˈtrɛər i əs[/t]] adj. dial. perverse; refractory • Etymology: 1250–1300; ME (< AF) < Lcontrārius contrary; see ous con•trar′i•ous•ly, adv. con•trar′i•ous•ness, n … From formal English to slang
contrarious — adjective difficult to deal with • Syn: ↑cross grained • Similar to: ↑stubborn, ↑obstinate, ↑unregenerate … Useful english dictionary
contrary — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) adj. opposed, opposite, counter, conflicting, contradictory; unfavorable, adverse; captious, willful, perverse; hostile, antagonistic. See opposition, negation, obstinacy.Ant., favorable; obliging. II… … English dictionary for students