Acerbic vs Strident - What's the difference?
acerbic | strident |
Tasting sour or bitter.
* 1998 Aug. 5, Dr. Peter Gott, "
Sharp, harsh, biting.
* 1986 Sept. 22, "
* 2005 May 5, Jay Mathews, "Don't Fire This Professor," Washington Post , p. T6:
Loud; shrill, piercing, high-pitched; rough-sounding
Grating or obnoxious
(nonstandard) Vigorous; making strides
* {{quote-news, 2003, November 6, Stuart Cosgrove, Taylor slagging Saddam shame., Daily Record, city=Glasgow
, passage=Under David Taylor's stewardship, the SFA has made strident progress. }}
(linguistics) One of a class of s-like fricatives produced by an airstream directed at the upper teeth.
As adjectives the difference between acerbic and strident
is that acerbic is tasting sour or bitter while strident is loud; shrill, piercing, high-pitched; rough-sounding.As a noun strident is
(linguistics) one of a class of s-like fricatives produced by an airstream directed at the upper teeth.acerbic
English
Adjective
(en adjective)Can inhaler cause addiction?," Catoosa County News (retrieved 19 Sep 2009):
- Those consumers who object to the acerbic taste of garlic can purchase de-odorized garlic or allicin extract.
West Germany: Last Taunts From the Lip," Time (retrieved 25 Apr 2014):
- Supercompetent, superconfident and supercritical, Schmidt is a gifted orator whose acerbic wit earned him the nickname "Schmidt the Lip."
- [H]e is one of the most acerbic people in his field, quick to take offense and not shy about telling people with whom he disagrees how much he thinks they have failed in thought and action.
Synonyms
* (sour or bitter) acerb, acrid * acrid, scathingAnagrams
*strident
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- The trumpet sounded strident against the string orchestra.
- The artist chose a strident mixture of colors.
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