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1 obstinately
['ɔbstɪnɪtlɪ]нареч.упрямо; настойчиво, упорноHe obstinately refused to consider the future. — Он упорно не желал думать о будущем.
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2 obstinado
adj.obstinate, bulldogged, stubborn, bulldoggish.past part.past participle of spanish verb: obstinar.* * *► adjetivo1 obstinate, stubborn* * *ADJ obstinate, stubborn* * *- da adjetivoa) ( tozudo) obstinate, stubbornb) ( tenaz) tenacious, doggedc) (Ven) ( harto) fed up (colloq)* * *= obstinate, stubborn, dogged, perverse, stiff-necked, pigheaded, refractory, self-willed, tenacious, persevering.Ex. She wanted to say: 'You are a conceited, obstinate, inflexible, manipulative, pompous, close-minded, insensitive, abrasive, opinionated, platitudinous oaf!'.Ex. He is seldom happy, never satisfied, temperamental, stubborn; his behavior at times can be charitably characterized as erratic.Ex. The last 50 years of academic librarianship have seen a dogged search for standards.Ex. The demand for business information, in relation to its price, is rather perverse in that high price often generates a high demand.Ex. The problem was that the stiff-necked men of science refused to bow down before the idols of political expediency.Ex. I argue that intellectual vices (such as being gullible, dogmatic, pigheaded, or prejudiced) are essential.Ex. However, these mushy words do little to reveal the refractory person uttering them.Ex. But apparently the self-willed distinction affected his reason -- he went soft in the head and ended up believing in his divine origins.Ex. She's tough and tenacious and she still has almost as many as she has friends.Ex. Napoleon Bonaparte said: 'Victory belongs to the most persevering' and 'Ability is of little account without opportunity'.* * *- da adjetivoa) ( tozudo) obstinate, stubbornb) ( tenaz) tenacious, doggedc) (Ven) ( harto) fed up (colloq)* * *= obstinate, stubborn, dogged, perverse, stiff-necked, pigheaded, refractory, self-willed, tenacious, persevering.Ex: She wanted to say: 'You are a conceited, obstinate, inflexible, manipulative, pompous, close-minded, insensitive, abrasive, opinionated, platitudinous oaf!'.
Ex: He is seldom happy, never satisfied, temperamental, stubborn; his behavior at times can be charitably characterized as erratic.Ex: The last 50 years of academic librarianship have seen a dogged search for standards.Ex: The demand for business information, in relation to its price, is rather perverse in that high price often generates a high demand.Ex: The problem was that the stiff-necked men of science refused to bow down before the idols of political expediency.Ex: I argue that intellectual vices (such as being gullible, dogmatic, pigheaded, or prejudiced) are essential.Ex: However, these mushy words do little to reveal the refractory person uttering them.Ex: But apparently the self-willed distinction affected his reason -- he went soft in the head and ended up believing in his divine origins.Ex: She's tough and tenacious and she still has almost as many as she has friends.Ex: Napoleon Bonaparte said: 'Victory belongs to the most persevering' and 'Ability is of little account without opportunity'.* * *obstinado -daA1 (tozudo) ‹persona/actitud› obstinate, stubborn2 (tenaz) ‹persona/lucha› tenacious, doggedsu trabajo le tiene obstinado he has had enough of his job o he is fed up with his job* * *
Del verbo obstinarse: ( conjugate obstinarse)
obstinado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
obstinado
obstinarse
obstinado◊ -da adjetivo
obstinarse ( conjugate obstinarse) verbo pronominal obstinado EN hacer algo to (obstinately) insist on doing sth;
se ha obstinado en que hay que terminarlo hoy he is bent on finishing it today
obstinado,-a adjetivo obstinate
obstinarse verbo reflexivo to persist [en, in]
' obstinado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
cabezón
- cabezona
- empeñada
- empeñado
- impenitente
- mollera
- obstinada
- burro
- cazurro
- obstinarse
English:
opinionated
- stiff-necked
- dogged
- head
- intractable
- obstinate
- perverse
* * *obstinado, -a adj1. [terco] obstinate, stubborn2. [tenaz] tenacious* * *adj obstinate* * *obstinado, -da adj1) terco: obstinate, stubborn2) : persistent♦ obstinadamente adv* * *obstinado adj obstinate -
3 obstinarse
pron.v.1 to refuse to give way.obstinarse en to persist in2 to become obstinate, to be obstinate, to become stubborn, to become obdurate.El abuelo se encabritó Grandfather balked=became obstinate.* * *1 to persist (en, in), insist (en, on)* * *VPR to be obstinateobstinarse en hacer algo — to persist in doing sth, insist on doing sth
* * *(v.) = persistEx. Nevertheless, it cannot yet be said that all cataloguing is conducted with the use of a computer, and even some major library systems persist with manual cataloguing practices.* * *(v.) = persistEx: Nevertheless, it cannot yet be said that all cataloguing is conducted with the use of a computer, and even some major library systems persist with manual cataloguing practices.
* * *
obstinarse ( conjugate obstinarse) verbo pronominal obstinarse EN hacer algo to (obstinately) insist on doing sth;
se ha obstinado en que hay que terminarlo hoy he is bent on finishing it today
obstinarse verbo reflexivo to persist [en, in]
' obstinarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
empeñarse
- porfiar
- empecinarse
- empeñar
* * *vpr1. [insistir] to refuse to give way;obstinarse en to insist on;se obstina en seguir adelante con el proyecto he insists on going ahead with the project;se ha obstinado en conseguirlo he is determined to achieve ittanto me molestan que termino obstinándome they disturb me so much that in the end I get really fed up* * *v/r insist;obstinarse en hacer algo insist on doing sth* * *obstinarse vrempecinarse: to be obstinate, to be stubborn* * *obstinarse vb to insist -
4 obstinado
Del verbo obstinarse: ( conjugate obstinarse) \ \
obstinado es: \ \el participioMultiple Entries: obstinado obstinarse
obstinado
◊ -da adjetivo
obstinarse ( conjugate obstinarse) verbo pronominal obstinado EN hacer algo to (obstinately) insist on doing sth; se ha obstinado en que hay que terminarlo hoy he is bent on finishing it today
obstinado,-a adjetivo obstinate
obstinarse verbo reflexivo to persist [en, in] ' obstinado' also found in these entries: Spanish: cabezón - cabezona - empeñada - empeñado - impenitente - mollera - obstinada - burro - cazurro - obstinarse English: opinionated - stiff-necked - dogged - head - intractable - obstinate - perverse -
5 obstinarse
obstinarse ( conjugate obstinarse) verbo pronominal obstinarse EN hacer algo to (obstinately) insist on doing sth; se ha obstinado en que hay que terminarlo hoy he is bent on finishing it today
obstinarse verbo reflexivo to persist [en, in] ' obstinarse' also found in these entries: Spanish: empeñarse - porfiar - empecinarse - empeñar -
6 عنيد
عَنِيد \ headstrong: unwilling to be controlled or advised; determined to have one’s own way: a headstrong child. obstinate: refusing to be reasonable; refusing to change one’s opinions or to obey orders: He obstinately refused to get out of our way. Donkeys are obstinate animals. pig-headed: refusing to listen to reason or to change one’s opinions. stubborn: determined; sticking to one’s own will, and refusing all orders or advice: He stubbornly refused to rest till the job was done. Donkeys are often stubborn. unruly: unwilling to obey; hard to control: an unruly child; an unruly crowd. \ عَنِيف \ drastic: (of actions, etc.) very serious; using unusual force to deal with serious trouble: Only drastic punishment will stop these crimes. fierce: (of people, their actions and feelings) violent: a fierce attack; a fierce hatred. hot: violent: a hot temper; a hot fight. keen: (of the feelings) strong: a keen interest in sport. passionate: showing passion: A passionate kiss. rough: not gentle: a rough game. severe: (of things) bad or violent, causing anxiety; (of people) hard and merciless: a severe storm; a severe illness; a severe judge. stormy: full of storms; angrily excited: Stormy weather; a stormy meeting. strenuous: needing or using a lot of bodily effort: strenuous exercise. tough: (of people) unpleasantly strong and rough: to get tough with somebody. violent: using force; fierce: a violent attack; a violent temper. wild: fierce; excited; uncontrolled: We could hear wild laughter. There was a wild look in her eyes. \ See Also شديد (شَديد)، صارم (صَارِم)، مُتَطَرِّف، قاس (قاسٍ)، عاصف (عَاصِف)، شاق (شاقّ) -
7 headstrong
عَنِيد \ headstrong: unwilling to be controlled or advised; determined to have one’s own way: a headstrong child. obstinate: refusing to be reasonable; refusing to change one’s opinions or to obey orders: He obstinately refused to get out of our way. Donkeys are obstinate animals. pig-headed: refusing to listen to reason or to change one’s opinions. stubborn: determined; sticking to one’s own will, and refusing all orders or advice: He stubbornly refused to rest till the job was done. Donkeys are often stubborn. unruly: unwilling to obey; hard to control: an unruly child; an unruly crowd. -
8 obstinate
عَنِيد \ headstrong: unwilling to be controlled or advised; determined to have one’s own way: a headstrong child. obstinate: refusing to be reasonable; refusing to change one’s opinions or to obey orders: He obstinately refused to get out of our way. Donkeys are obstinate animals. pig-headed: refusing to listen to reason or to change one’s opinions. stubborn: determined; sticking to one’s own will, and refusing all orders or advice: He stubbornly refused to rest till the job was done. Donkeys are often stubborn. unruly: unwilling to obey; hard to control: an unruly child; an unruly crowd. -
9 pig-headed
عَنِيد \ headstrong: unwilling to be controlled or advised; determined to have one’s own way: a headstrong child. obstinate: refusing to be reasonable; refusing to change one’s opinions or to obey orders: He obstinately refused to get out of our way. Donkeys are obstinate animals. pig-headed: refusing to listen to reason or to change one’s opinions. stubborn: determined; sticking to one’s own will, and refusing all orders or advice: He stubbornly refused to rest till the job was done. Donkeys are often stubborn. unruly: unwilling to obey; hard to control: an unruly child; an unruly crowd. -
10 stubborn
عَنِيد \ headstrong: unwilling to be controlled or advised; determined to have one’s own way: a headstrong child. obstinate: refusing to be reasonable; refusing to change one’s opinions or to obey orders: He obstinately refused to get out of our way. Donkeys are obstinate animals. pig-headed: refusing to listen to reason or to change one’s opinions. stubborn: determined; sticking to one’s own will, and refusing all orders or advice: He stubbornly refused to rest till the job was done. Donkeys are often stubborn. unruly: unwilling to obey; hard to control: an unruly child; an unruly crowd. -
11 unruly
عَنِيد \ headstrong: unwilling to be controlled or advised; determined to have one’s own way: a headstrong child. obstinate: refusing to be reasonable; refusing to change one’s opinions or to obey orders: He obstinately refused to get out of our way. Donkeys are obstinate animals. pig-headed: refusing to listen to reason or to change one’s opinions. stubborn: determined; sticking to one’s own will, and refusing all orders or advice: He stubbornly refused to rest till the job was done. Donkeys are often stubborn. unruly: unwilling to obey; hard to control: an unruly child; an unruly crowd. -
12 Almeida, Francisco de
(1450?-1510)One of the most notable conquistadores and empire builders of Portugal's early Asian empire and the first viceroy of Portuguese India. Having served the Catholic kings in the Granada campaigns, Almeida was also a skilled navigator-sailor. In 1505, King Manuel I dispatched Almeida to Portuguese India as the first viceroy, with a fleet of 21 ships and about 1,500 soldiers. A ferocious and cruel fighter, Almeida fought his way up the coast of East Africa and along the west coast of India. In early February 1509, Almeida's fleet annihilated a Muslim fleet in the harbor of Diu, ensuring Portugal's naval supremacy in the Indian Ocean for more than a century, one of the more decisive naval engagements in world maritime history. Having served as viceroy successfully during 1506-09 when replaced by Afonso de Albuquerque, under orders from King Manuel, Almeida obstinately refused to step down. Orders from Portugal arrived via a fleet in India in October 1509, and Almeida was forced to accept the fact of his dismissal. On his return to Portugal, when landing near the Cape of Good Hope, Almeida was killed in a skirmish with Africans. -
13 متصلب في الرأي
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14 obstinate
مُتَصَلِّب في الرأي \ obstinate: refusing to be reasonable; refusing to change one’s opinions or to obey orders: He obstinately refused to get out of our way. Donkeys are obstinate animals. \ See Also عنيد (عَنيد) -
15 ostinatamente
ostinatamente avv.1 obstinately, stubbornly, mulishly: credeva ostinatamente alla possibilità di una vittoria finale, he obstinately believed in the possibility of a final victory; era ostinatamente attaccato alle sue idee, he clung obstinately (o stubbornly) to his opinions; si rifiutava ostinatamente di entrare, he stubbornly refused to enter2 ( persistentemente) persistently: il vento soffiò ostinatamente dalle prime ore del mattino, the wind blew persistently from the early morning.* * *[ostinata'mente]avverbio obstinately, stubbornly* * *ostinatamente/ostinata'mente/obstinately, stubbornly. -
16 refuse
1. II asked him to come (to join us, etc.), but he refused я пригласил /попросил/ его прийти и т.д., но он отказался; she is free to refuse она может /имеет право/ отказаться2. IIrefuse in some manner refuse pointblank (positively, obstinately, curtly, courteously, haughtily, etc.) отказываться наотрез и т.д.3. III1) refuse smth. refuse a request (permission, admittance, help, leave of absence, etc.) отказывать в просьбе и т.д.; refuse smb. refuse a lady (miners, etc.) отказывать даме и т.д.2) refuse smth. refuse smb.'s invitation (a gift, a bribe, money, an office, the nomination for mayor, food, all medicines, etc.) отказываться от приглашения и т.д., не принимать приглашение и т.д.; he refused my offer of help он отказался от моего предложения о помощи; the editor refused the story редактор не взял этот рассказ; refuse smb. refuse a suitor (a candidate, this pleasant young man, etc.) отказывать поклоннику и т.д.4. IVrefuse smth. in some manner refuse smth. resolutely (modestly, curtly, etc.) отказывать в чем-л. решительно и т.д.5. Vrefuse smb. smth. refuse smb. money (any information, admittance, satisfaction, tribute, one's request, a favour, etc.) отказывать кому-л. в деньгах и т.д.; they refused me permission они мне не дали разрешения; I can't refuse her anything я ни в чем не могу ей отказать6. XIbe refused the invitation was refused от приглашения отказались; that is not to be refused a) в этом отказать нельзя; б) от этого нельзя отказаться; be refused in some manner the request was curtly refused в просьбе было резко отказано; I have never been refused мне никогда не отказывали, я никогда не получал отказа7. XIIIrefuse to do smth.1) resolutely (steadily, stupidly, etc.) refuse to help [me] (to answer, to speak, to eat, to move on, to surrender, to take money, to give one's consent, etc.) решительно и т.д. отказываться помочь [мне] и т.д., we refuseed to accept his resignation мы отказались принять его отставку; she refused to be seen home она отказалась /не захотела/, чтобы ее провожали домой2) refuse to burn (to shut, etc.) никак не загораться и т.д., three times the trap refused to work трижды капкан не срабатывал8. XXI1refuse smth. for smth. refuse a hundred pounds for a picture отказаться взять сто фунтов за картину -
17 uparcie
adv. grad. [zaprzeczać] stubbornly, obstinately- uparcie milczeć to remain stubbornly a. obstinately silent- uparcie twierdzić, że… to insist that…- uparcie odmawiał współpracy he stubbornly refused to cooperate- uparcie obstawał przy swoich przekonaniach he stubbornly a. doggedly clung to his convictions* * *adv* * *adv.persistently, stubbornly, obstinately, doggedly; uparcie czemuś zaprzeczać deny sth stubbornly; uparcie twierdzić, że... insist that...The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > uparcie
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18 obstiner
* * *obstiner: s'obstiner verb table: aimer vpr to persist (dans in; à faire in doing); il a tort, mais il s'obstine he's wrong, but he persists; s'obstiner à ne pas faire qch to refuse obstinately to do sth; s'obstiner dans le silence to maintain a stubborn silence; s'obstiner dans une opinion to cling stubbornly to an opinion; s'obstiner sur une question to worry at a question.[ɔpstine]s'obstiner verbe pronominal intransitifne t'obstine pas, abandonne le projet don't be obstinate, give the project upelle s'obstine à vouloir partir she persists in wanting to leave ou insists on leavingil s'obstinait à ne rien dire he obstinately ou stubbornly refused to talk -
19 uporczywie
adv. grad. [twierdzić, zaprzeczać] stubbornly, persistently; [dzwonić] insistently; [wpatrywać się] unwaveringly- uporczywie dążył do celu he doggedly pursued his goal- uporczywie łamać prawo to persist in breaking the law- uporczywie milczeć to remain stubbornly a. obstinately silent- uporczywie nie płacił podatków he stubbornly refused to pay his taxes* * *adv( odmawiać) persistently, repeatedly; ( wpatrywać się) intensely* * *adv.insistently, persistently, stubbornly; (zwł. wpatrywać się) fixedly; uporczywie do czegoś dążyć set one's mind to sth; uporczywie coś robić persist in doing sth; patrzeć uporczywie na coś/kogoś stare l. gaze l. gape at sth/sb.The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > uporczywie
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