Coldhearted vs Barbaric - What's the difference?
coldhearted | barbaric | Related terms |
* {{quote-news, 2009, January 18, Charles Isherwood, Hedda Forever: An Antiheroine for the Ages, New York Times, url=
, passage=Since she sprang from the imagination of the Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen in 1890, this coldhearted antiheroine has maintained a tight grip on the attention of audiences across the globe, outstripping all the many other complicated women in Ibsen’s oeuvre, even the door-slamming Nora of “A Doll’s House. }}
Of or relating to a barbarian; uncivilised, uncultured or uncouth.
Coldhearted is a related term of barbaric.
As adjectives the difference between coldhearted and barbaric
is that coldhearted is while barbaric is of or relating to a barbarian; uncivilised, uncultured or uncouth.coldhearted
English
Adjective
barbaric
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- Eating baby seals alive is barbaric .