Word of the Day
for Sunday,
April 28, 2013
Stark \stahrk\, adjective:
1. extremely simple or severe: a
stark interior.
2. sheer, utter, downright, or complete: stark madness.
3. harsh, grim, or desolate, as a view, place, etc.: a stark landscape.
4. bluntly or sternly plain; not softened or glamorised: the stark reality of the schedule's deadline.
5. stiff or rigid in substance, muscles, etc.
6. rigid in death.
7. Archaic. strong; powerful; massive or robust.
2. sheer, utter, downright, or complete: stark madness.
3. harsh, grim, or desolate, as a view, place, etc.: a stark landscape.
4. bluntly or sternly plain; not softened or glamorised: the stark reality of the schedule's deadline.
5. stiff or rigid in substance, muscles, etc.
6. rigid in death.
7. Archaic. strong; powerful; massive or robust.
adverb:
1. utterly, absolutely, or quite: stark mad.
2. Chiefly Scot. and North England. in a stark manner; stoutly or vigorously.
1. utterly, absolutely, or quite: stark mad.
2. Chiefly Scot. and North England. in a stark manner; stoutly or vigorously.
His office was stark in
comparison to Valek's and lacked personal decorations. The only object in the
room that did not have a specific purpose was a hand-size statue of a black
snow cat.
-- Maria V. Snyder, Poison Study, 2005
-- Maria V. Snyder, Poison Study, 2005
I thought of how
clouds sometimes race across the sunlit canyons formed by the steep sides of
skyscrapers, so that the stark
divisions of dark and light are shot through with passing light and dark.
-- Teju Cole, Open City, 2001
-- Teju Cole, Open City, 2001
From the Proto-Indo-European root ster- meaning "stiff"
or "rigid," stark
entered English around the year 1000. It shares its root with the word stare.
Thanks to: www.dictionary.com
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