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Harsh   /hɑrʃ/   Listen
Harsh

adjective
(compar. harsher; superl. harshest)
1.
Unpleasantly stern.  Synonym: rough.  "The nomad life is rough and hazardous"
2.
Disagreeable to the senses.  "Harsh cognac" , "The harsh white light makes you screw up your eyes" , "Harsh irritating smoke filled the hallway"
3.
Of textures that are rough to the touch or substances consisting of relatively large particles.  Synonym: coarse.  "Coarse sand" , "A coarse weave"
4.
Unkind or cruel or uncivil.  Synonym: rough.  "A harsh and unlovable old tyrant" , "A rough answer"
5.
Severe.
6.
Sharply disagreeable; rigorous.  Synonym: abrasive.  "An abrasive character"



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"Harsh" Quotes from Famous Books



... refuge and shelter for twelve months than run the risk of hearing of some other situation? I walked slowly along the street toward the busier thoroughfares, with my head bent down and my mind busy, when suddenly a heavy hand was laid upon my arm, grasping it with crushing force, and a harsh, thick voice shouted triumphantly ...
— The Doctor's Dilemma • Hesba Stretton

... great ease, and at a small expense, by our East India Company; and this in the space of eight or nine months' time; and considering what mighty advantages might accrue to the nation, there seems to be nothing harsh or improbable in supposing that some time or other, when the legislature is more than usually intent on affairs of commerce, they may be directed to make such an expedition at the expense of the public. By this means all the back coast of ...
— Early Australian Voyages • John Pinkerton

... delivered by his old and congenial friend William E. Dubois, himself since summoned to take the same mysterious journey. "In fine," says he, "Mr. Mickley seemed superior to any meanness; free from vulgar passions and habits, from pride and vanity, from evil speaking and harsh judging. He was eminently sincere, affable, kind, and gentle: in the best sense of the word he was ...
— Lippincott's Magazine Of Popular Literature And Science, Old Series, Vol. 36--New Series, Vol. 10, July 1885 • Various

... words. Separate professions, pursuits, and provinces of literature have gained their conventional terminology. There is an historical, political, social, commercial style. The ear of the nation has become accustomed to useful expressions or combinations of words, which otherwise would sound harsh. Strange metaphors have been naturalized in the ordinary prose, yet cannot be taken as precedents for a similar liberty. Criticism has become an art, and exercises a continual and jealous watch over the free genius of new writers. It is difficult ...
— The Idea of a University Defined and Illustrated: In Nine - Discourses Delivered to the Catholics of Dublin • John Henry Newman

... The harsh order was iterated; and Esther Mason, fainting with shame and agony, was conveyed to the prison in Giltspur Street. The next day she was fully committed to Newgate on the capital charge of privately stealing in a shop to the value of five pounds. A few hours after her incarceration within ...
— The Experiences of a Barrister, and Confessions of an Attorney • Samuel Warren


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