Obdurate vs Intransigence - What's the difference?
obdurate | intransigence |
Stubbornly persistent, generally in wrongdoing; refusing to reform or repent.
* Hooker
* Shakespeare
* 1818 , ,"The Revolt of Islam", canto 4, stanza 9, lines 1486-7:
* {{quote-news
, year=2011
, date=February 12
, author=Les Roopanarine
, title=Birmingham 1 - 0 Stoke
, work=BBC
(obsolete) Physically hardened, toughened.
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Unwillingness to change one's views or to agree.
* 2013 , Simon Jenkins, Gibraltar and the Falklands deny the logic of history'' (in ''The Guardian , 14 August 2013)[http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/aug/14/gibraltar-falklands-deny-logic-history]
The state of being intransigent.
As an adjective obdurate
is stubbornly persistent, generally in wrongdoing; refusing to reform or repent.As a noun intransigence is
unwillingness to change one's views or to agree.obdurate
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- The very custom of evil makes the heart obdurate against whatsoever instructions to the contrary.
- Art thou obdurate , flinty, hard as steel, / Nay, more than flint, for stone at rain relenteth?
- But custom maketh blind and obdurate
- The loftiest hearts.
citation, page= , passage=An injury-time goal from Nikola Zigic against an obdurate Stoke side gave Birmingham back-to back Premier League wins for the first time in 14 months.}}
Synonyms
* (stubbornly persistent in wrongdoing): hardened, hard-hearted, impertinent, intractable, unrepentant, unyielding, recalcitrantDerived terms
* obduracyReferences
intransigence
English
Noun
(en noun)- The intransigence of both sides frustrated the negotiators.
- The curse has been Spanish ineptitude feeding Gibraltarian intransigence . Border hold-ups are counterproductive to winning hearts and minds, as were blundering Argentinian landings on the outer Falklands.