Exigent vs Imperious - What's the difference?
exigent | imperious |
Urgent; needing immediate action.
* 2003 , , U.S. Department of Defence
Demanding; needing great effort.
(archaic) Extremity; end; limit; pressing urgency
* 1591 ,
* 1611 ,
(obsolete, UK, legal) The name of a writ in proceedings before outlawry.
Domineering, arrogant, or overbearing.
* 1866 – , translated by C. J. Hogarth
Urgent.
* 1891 –
(obsolete) Imperial or regal.
* 1895 –
As adjectives the difference between exigent and imperious
is that exigent is urgent; needing immediate action while imperious is domineering, arrogant, or overbearing.As a noun exigent
is (archaic) extremity; end; limit; pressing urgency.exigent
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- Article 2 also provides that acts of torture cannot be justified on the grounds of exigent circumstances, such as state of war or public emergency, or on orders from a superior officer or public authority.
Derived terms
* allocatur exigentNoun
(en noun)- These eyes, like lamps whose wasting oil is spent, \ Wax dim, as drawing to their exigent ;
- Therefore as one complaineth, that always in the Senate of Rome, [Cicero 5° de finibus.] there was one or other that called for an interpreter: so lest the Church be driven to the like exigent , it is necessary to have translations in a readiness.
- (Abbott)
imperious
English
Adjective
(-)- ...she glanced about her in an imperious , challenging sort of way, with looks and gestures that clearly were unstudied.
- Circumstances of an imperious nature, which it is unnecessary to relate here, had prevented him from taking service with that gallant army which had fought the disastrous campaigns ending with the fall of Corinth.
- She was quick, beautiful, imperious , while he was quiet, slow, and misty.
