Antonyms for hardest
Grammar : Adj, adv |
Spell : hahrd |
Phonetic Transcription : hɑrd |
- bright
- cheerful
- delicate
- disputable
- doubtful
- easily
- easy
- facile
- flexible
- gentle
- gently
- happy
- indefinite
- indulgently
- inexact
- kind
- light
- lightly
- malleable
- merciful
- mild
- moderately
- nice
- pleasant
- pliable
- pliant
- questionable
- sensitive
- simple
- soft
- softly
- sunny
- sympathetic
- tolerantly
- trivial
- uncertain
- unenthusiastically
- unfixedly
- unimportant
- unsure
- untrue
- vulnerable
- weak
- yielding
Definition of hardest
Origin :- Old English heard "solid, firm, not soft," also "severe, rigorous, cruel," from Proto-Germanic *hardu- (cf. Old Saxon and Dutch hard, Old Norse harðr "hard," Old High German harto "extremely, very," German hart, Gothic hardus "hard"), from PIE *kortu-, (cf. Greek kratos "strength," kratys "strong"), from root *kar-/*ker- "hard." Meaning "difficult to do" is from c.1200. The adverb sense was also present in Old English.
- Hard of hearing preserves obsolete Middle English sense of "having difficulty in doing something." Hard liquor is 1879, American English (hard drink is from 1810; hard cider is from 1789), and this probably led to hard drugs (1955). Hard facts is from 1887; hard news is from 1938. Hard copy (as opposed to computer record) is from 1964; hard disk is from 1978. Hard up (1610s) is originally nautical, of steering (slang sense of "short of money" is from 1821), as is hard and fast (1680s), of a ship on shore. Hard times "period of poverty" is from 1705.
- Hard money (1706) is specie, as opposed to paper. Hence 19c. U.S. hard (n.) "one who advocates the use of metallic money as the national currency" (1844). To play hard to get is from 1945. Hard rock as a pop music style recorded from 1967.
- adj rocklike
- adj difficult, exhausting
- adj cruel, ruthless
- adj true, indisputable
- adv with great force
- adv with determination
- adv with difficulty
- adv with resentment
- adv in a fixed manner
- Aye, lad, and the plain things are always the hardest things to do.
- Extract from : « Way of the Lawless » by Max Brand
- And thus began to-day—it has been the hardest day in a hard week.
- Extract from : « The Bacillus of Beauty » by Harriet Stark
- Duerot has tried his hardest to sup in Lagny, and has been balked by German valour.
- Extract from : « Camps, Quarters and Casual Places » by Archibald Forbes
- They seemed to bring the last bitter pang, hardest of all to bear.
- Extract from : « Howard Pyle's Book of Pirates » by Howard Pyle
- But you're asking me the one thing that's hardest, as you probably know.
- Extract from : « It Happened in Egypt » by C. N. Williamson
- It was the hardest of all things to wait, while shells now and then struck among them.
- Extract from : « The Rock of Chickamauga » by Joseph A. Altsheler
- I have, captain, and the hardest of it all was when I saw our army repulsed to-day.
- Extract from : « The Rock of Chickamauga » by Joseph A. Altsheler
- I say this, because what I must bid you to do for Charles's sake, is the hardest thing to do of all.
- Extract from : « A Tale of Two Cities » by Charles Dickens
- Then Orpheus began to play, and the hardest rocks were stirred.
- Extract from : « Classic Myths » by Mary Catherine Judd
- Always, when hardest pressed for food, he found something to kill.
- Extract from : « White Fang » by Jack London
Synonyms for hardest
- absolute
- acrimonious
- actively
- actual
- adamantine
- agonizingly
- angrily
- angry
- animatedly
- antagonistic
- arduous
- arduously
- assiduously
- austere
- awkwardly
- backbreaking
- badly
- bare
- bitter
- bitterly
- bleak
- boisterously
- bothersome
- briskly
- brutal
- brutally
- burdensome
- burdensomely
- callous
- carefully
- close
- closely
- cold
- cold fish
- cold-blooded
- compact
- compacted
- complicated
- compressed
- concentrated
- consolidated
- cruelly
- cumbersomely
- cumbrously
- dark
- definite
- demanding
- dense
- difficile
- diligently
- disagreeable
- distressing
- distressingly
- doggedly
- dour
- down-to-earth
- earnestly
- effortful
- energetically
- exacting
- exhaustingly
- exhaustively
- fast
- fatiguing
- ferociously
- fiercely
- firm
- firmly
- forcibly
- formidable
- frantically
- furiously
- genuine
- grievous
- grim
- grinding
- gruelingly
- hairy
- hard as nails
- hard-boiled
- hardened
- hardly
- harsh
- harshly
- heavily
- heavy
- herculean
- hostile
- impenetrable
- inclement
- inconveniently
- indurate
- indurated
- industriously
- inflexible
- intemperate
- intensely
- intensively
- intently
- intolerable
- intricate
- involved
- irksome
- iron
- keenly
- knotty
- labored
- laborious
- laboriously
- like fury
- madly
- mean
- meanly
- merciless
- murder
- obdurate
- onerous
- operose
- packed
- painful
- painfully
- painstakingly
- persistently
- perverse
- pitiless
- plain
- ponderously
- positive
- powerfully
- practical
- pragmatic
- rancorous
- rancorously
- realistic
- relentlessly
- reluctantly
- resentful
- rigid
- rigorous
- rigorously
- rocky
- rough
- roughly
- rowdily
- rugged
- savagely
- scabrous
- searchingly
- serious
- seriously
- set
- severe
- severely
- sharply
- slavish
- slowly
- solid
- solidly
- sorely
- spiritedly
- sprightly
- steadfastly
- steadily
- stern
- sticky
- stiff
- stony
- stormily
- strenuous
- strenuously
- strict
- stringent
- strong
- strongly
- stubborn
- sure
- terrible
- thick
- thick-skinned
- thoroughly
- tight
- tightly
- tiredly
- tiring
- toilful
- toilsome
- toilsomely
- tough
- troublesome
- tumultously/tumultuously
- turbulently
- undeniable
- unfeeling
- unjust
- unkind
- unpleasant
- unrelenting
- unremittingly
- unsparing
- unsympathetic
- untiringly
- unvarnished
- unwieldily
- unyielding
- uphill
- uphill battle
- uproariously
- urgently
- vengeful
- verified
- viciously
- vigorously
- violently
- vivaciously
- wearing
- wearisome
- wearying
- wildly
- with all one's might
- with great effort
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019