Adamant vs Dogged - What's the difference?
adamant | dogged |
An imaginary rock or mineral of impenetrable hardness; a name given to the diamond and other substances of extreme hardness.
* {{quote-book
, year= 1582
, year_published=
, author=
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, title= The first booke of the Christian exercise, appertayning to resolution
, url= http://books.google.com/books?id=gvbik25DcCgC&pg=PT144
, original=
, chapter= 8
, section =
, isbn=
, edition=
, publisher= G. Flinton
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, passage= This then is and alwayes hath ben the fashion of Worldlinges, & reprobate persons, to harden their hartes as an adamant stone, against anye thinge that shalbe tolde the for amendement of their lives, and for the savinge of their soules.
}}
An embodiment of impregnable hardness.
* 1956 , , The City and the Stars , p 34
A magnet; a lodestone.
* 1594–96 , :
(dog)
* 1903 , , The Way of All Flesh :
stubbornly persevering, steadfast
* 1900 , , The Son of the Wolf :
* 2004 , , Character: Profiles in Presidential Courage :
As adjectives the difference between adamant and dogged
is that adamant is firm; unshakeable; unyielding; determined while dogged is stubbornly persevering, steadfast.As a noun adamant
is an imaginary rock or mineral of impenetrable hardness; a name given to the diamond and other substances of extreme hardness.As a verb dogged is
past tense of dog.adamant
English
(wikipedia adamant)Alternative forms
* adamaunt (obsolete)Synonyms
* See alsoReferences
*Noun
(en noun)- Unprotected matter, however adamant , would have been ground to dust ages ago.
- You draw me, you hard-hearted adamant :
- But yet you draw not iron, for all my heart
- Is true as steel. Leave you your power to draw,
- And I shall have no power to follow you.
Derived terms
* adamance (pos n) * adamantane (pos a) * adamantean (pos a) * adamantine (pos a) * adamantly (pos adv)References
* ----dogged
English
Etymology 1
From the verb to dog .Verb
(head)- At night proctors patrolled the street and dogged your steps if you tried to go into any haunt where the presence of vice was suspected.
Etymology 2
From (etyl), characteristics similar to that of a dog .Adjective
(en adjective)- Still, the dogged obstinacy of his race held him to the pace he had set, and would hold him till he dropped in his tracks.
- It had taken nine years from the evening that Truman first showed up with a pie plate at her mother's door, but his dogged perseverance eventually won him the hand of his boyhood Sunday school crush.
