strident

strident
[[t]stra͟ɪd(ə)nt[/t]]
1) ADJ-GRADED If you use strident to describe someone or the way they express themselves, you mean that they make their feelings or opinions known in a very strong way that perhaps makes people uncomfortable.

She was increasingly seen as a strident feminist.

...the unnecessarily strident tone of the President's remarks...

Demands for his resignation have become more and more strident.

Derived words:
stridently ADV-GRADED ADV with v, ADV adj

He was arrested in 1984 on suspicion of being a spy - a charge he stridently denies...

In the late 1920s the party began to adopt a more stridently nationalistic posture.

2) ADJ-GRADED If a voice or sound is strident, it is loud, harsh, and unpleasant to listen to.

She tried to laugh, and the sound was harsh and strident...

He could hear Hilton's strident voice rising in vehement argument with Houston.

Syn:

English dictionary. 2008.

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  • strident — strident, ente [ stridɑ̃, ɑ̃t ] adj. • 1529, rare av. déb. XIXe; lat. stridens, entis, de stridere ♦ Se dit d un bruit, d un son qui est à la fois aigu et intense. ⇒ perçant, sifflant. Un grincement strident. « Le sifflet strident d une… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • strident — STRIDÉNT, Ă, stridenţi, te, adj. 1. (Despre sunete; adesea adverbial) Care este ascuţit şi puternic, pătrunzător; lipsit de armonie, neplăcut la auz. ♦ p. gener. Neplăcut, supărător; şocant, izbitor. 2. (Despre culori) Care nu este în armonie cu… …   Dicționar Român

  • strident — strident, ente (stri dan, dan t ) adj. Qui rend un son aigre et perçant. HISTORIQUE    XVIe s. •   Nous entendismes en l air un son haut et strident, RAB. Pant. v, 17. ÉTYMOLOGIE    Lat. stridere, dont on rapproche le grec . SUPPLÉMENT AU… …   Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré

  • Strident — may refer to * strident vowels * strident consonants, a feature related to sibilant consonants, but also including labiodental and uvular fricatives …   Wikipedia

  • Strident — Stri dent, a. [L. stridens, entis, p. pr. of stridere to make a grating or creaking noise.] Characterized by harshness; grating; shrill. A strident voice. Thackeray. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • strident — (adj.) 1650s, from Fr. strident, from L. stridentem (nom. stridens), prp. of stridere utter an inarticulate sound, grate, screech, possibly of imitative origin. Related: Stridently …   Etymology dictionary

  • strident — index discordant, harsh Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • strident — 1 *loud, stentorian, earsplitting, hoarse, raucous, stertorous Analogous words: harsh, *rough: resounding, *resonant 2 blatant, clamorous, *vociferous, boisterous, obstreperous Analogous words: harsh, uneven, * …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • strident — [adj] harsh, shrill blatant, boisterous, clamorous, clashing, discordant, grating, hoarse, jangling, jarring, loud, noisy, obstreperous, rasping, raucous, screeching, squawky, squeaky, stentorian, stertorous, stridulant, stridulous, unmusical,… …   New thesaurus

  • strident — ► ADJECTIVE 1) loud and harsh. 2) presenting a point of view in an excessively forceful way. DERIVATIVES stridency noun stridently adverb. ORIGIN from Latin stridere creak …   English terms dictionary

  • strident — [strīd′ nt] adj. [L stridens, prp. of stridere, to make a grating noise, rasp < IE echoic base * (s)trei > Gr trizein, to chirp, screech, L strix, screech owl] harsh sounding; shrill; grating SYN. VOCIFEROUS stridence n. stridency… …   English World dictionary

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