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Antagonistic   /æntˌægənˈɪstɪk/   Listen
Antagonistic

adjective
1.
Indicating opposition or resistance.  Synonym: counter.
2.
Characterized by antagonism or antipathy.  Synonyms: antipathetic, antipathetical.  "Antipathetic factions within the party"
3.
Arousing animosity or hostility.  "Europe was antagonistic to the Unites States"  Antonym: conciliatory.
4.
Used especially of drugs or muscles that counteract or neutralize each other's effect.  Synonym: incompatible.  Antonym: synergistic.
5.
Incapable of harmonious association.



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"Antagonistic" Quotes from Famous Books



... Italian city, this concentration of life was far more marked in the ancient Roman town, wherein the Forum must have appeared as the very heart of the whole body social and politic. Roman city life indeed displayed two strongly antagonistic phases:—the utmost privacy in the home, the most public exhibition in the Forum, where every trade and form of business were carried on in the open air, and whither pursuit of gain, or pleasure, or ...
— The Naples Riviera • Herbert M. Vaughan

... in every case, but always with reference each to the other in the order named. On the admission of Florida and Iowa, Colonel Benton remarked that "it seemed strange that two territories so different in age, so distant from each other, so antagonistic in natural features and political institutions, should ripen into States at the same time, and come into the Union by a single Act; but these very antagonisms —that is, the antagonistic provisions on the subject of slavery— made the conjunction, and gave to the two young States an ...
— Twenty Years of Congress, Vol. 1 (of 2) • James Gillespie Blaine

... no longer the employer; a being of another race, eternally placed in antagonistic attitude; going through the world glittering like gold, with a stony heart within, which knew no sorrow but through the accidents of Trade; no longer the enemy, the oppressor, but a very poor ...
— Mary Barton • Elizabeth Gaskell

... distant future. Alexander the First was on the throne of Russia,— and her millions of serfs were oppressed as by the iron hand of the Caesars. The splendid German Empire of to-day had no place on the map of the world; its present powerful constituencies were antagonistic provinces and warring independent cities. Napoleon Bonaparte—'calling Fate into the lists'—by a succession of victories unparalleled in history had overturned thrones, compelled kings upon bended knee to sue for peace, and substituted ...
— Something of Men I Have Known - With Some Papers of a General Nature, Political, Historical, and Retrospective • Adlai E. Stevenson

... the supreme authority. All valued him as their present preserver, and all hated him as their future impediment. Such were the conflicting sentiments entertained towards Mirabeau, during the last incidents of his eccentric and volatile career. And in the midst of so many antagonistic interests, he alone remained unshaken and unappalled, his oratory rendering him still the mouth-piece of the Revolution, his duplicity its diplomatist, and his intellectual contrivance its statesman. Nor was he satisfied with these successes; he sought others, and was equally fortunate. Profligacy ...
— Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine - Volume 62, No. 384, October 1847 • Various


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