Austere vs Cantankerous - What's the difference?
austere | cantankerous | Related terms |
Grim or severe in manner or appearance
Lacking trivial decoration; not extravagant or gaudy
given to or marked by an ill-tempered nature, ill-tempered, cranky, surly, crabby.
* 1839 , Fraser's magazine for town and country, Volume 20, p618
* 1866 Every Saturday, Volume 2, p355
* 1947 , John Courtenay Trewin, Plays of the year: Volume 47, 195
* 1998 , Pauline Chazan, The moral self, 80
* 2004 , 386 F. 3d 192 - Jacques v. Dimarzio Inc
* 2004 , 386 F. 3d 192 - Jacques v. Dimarzio Inc
* 2007 , Linda Francis Lee, The Devil in the Junior League, p44
* from where is this quotation?
* 2010 ,
Austere is a related term of cantankerous.
As adjectives the difference between austere and cantankerous
is that austere is austere while cantankerous is given to or marked by an ill-tempered nature, ill-tempered, cranky, surly, crabby.austere
English
Adjective
(en-adj)- The headmistress was an austere old woman.
- The interior of the church was as austere as the parishioners were dour.
Synonyms
* (grim or severe) stern, strict, forbidding * (lacking trivial decoration) simple, plain, unadorned, unembellishedAntonyms
* (not lacking trivial decoration) overwrought, flamboyant, extravagant, gaudy, flashyDerived terms
* austerity * austerelycantankerous
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- she is a cantankerous old maid fretting and snarling over the loss of her beauty.
- The great principle on which the privileges of cantankerous folly and ill-nature found is this: that as we go on through life we grow somewhat cowardly; and if a thing be disagreeable, we just keep out of its way: sometimes by rather shabby expedients.
- I am being cantankerous'''. Some days I feel so '''cantankerous I could take a machine-gun into the streets and shoot down the whole population of Hendon Central; I don't know why.
- By contrast, cantankerous and churlish people are contemptuously independent of others’ opinions, not caring enough about others and their views.
- The cantankerous are those "marked by ill humor, irritability, and determination to disagree." Webster's New International Dictionary 328 (3d ed.1986).
- All things being equal, a cantankerous person or a curmudgeon would be more secure by becoming more unpleasant.
- Nina was thrilled, muttering her cantankerous joy that I was getting out of the house.
- The cantankerous landlord always grumbled when asked to fix something.
- Unfortunately, as Great-Aunt Bert could be a bit cantankerous , they were having to be creative