Acerbity vs Harshness - What's the difference?
acerbity | harshness | Related terms |
Sourness of taste, with bitterness and astringency, like that of unripe fruit.
Harshness, bitterness, or severity; as, acerbity of temper, of language, of pain.
* {{quote-book, year=1905, author=
, title=
, chapter=1 The quality of being harsh.
*1891 , (Thomas Hardy), (w, Tess of the d'Urbervilles) ,
*:And yet these harshnesses' are tenderness itself when compared with the universal '''harshness''' out of which they grow; the ' harshness of the position towards the temperament, of the means towards the aims, of to-day towards yesterday, of hereafter towards to-day.
*
*:She wakened in sharp panic, bewildered by the grotesquerie of some half-remembered dream in contrast with the harshness of inclement fact, drowsily realising that since she had fallen asleep it had come on to rain smartly out of a shrouded sky.
Acerbity is a related term of harshness.
As nouns the difference between acerbity and harshness
is that acerbity is sourness of taste, with bitterness and astringency, like that of unripe fruit while harshness is the quality of being harsh.acerbity
English
Noun
(acerbities)citation, passage=“Well ?” I repeated with some acerbity . I had been wondering for the last ten minutes how many more knots he would manage to make in that same bit of string before he actually started undoing them again.}}
References
*harshness
English
Noun
Part 6:
