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Violent   /vˈaɪələnt/  /vˈaɪlənt/   Listen
Violent

adjective
1.
Acting with or marked by or resulting from great force or energy or emotional intensity.  "A violent person" , "Violent feelings" , "A violent rage" , "Felt a violent dislike"  Antonym: nonviolent.
2.
Effected by force or injury rather than natural causes.
3.
(of colors or sounds) intensely vivid or loud.  Synonym: wild.  "Her dress was a violent red" , "A violent noise" , "Wild colors" , "Wild shouts"
4.
Marked by extreme intensity of emotions or convictions; inclined to react violently; fervid.  Synonyms: fierce, tearing, trigger-happy, vehement.  "In a tearing rage" , "Vehement dislike" , "Violent passions"
5.
Characterized by violence or bloodshed.  Synonyms: crimson, red.  "Fann'd by Conquest's crimson wing" , "Convulsed with red rage"



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"Violent" Quotes from Famous Books



... political philosophers to dream of what might have been, or in the abstract of what ought to be. Reform, it is true, in this way comes slowly, but it comes without the disturbance of material interests, without agitation of human passions, and without the violent outbreaks which these occasion—hindering and obstructing its progress in that grand and orderly procession of moral causes and effects which expresses and marks the providence and government ...
— A Report of the Debates and Proceedings in the Secret Sessions of the Conference Convention • Lucius Eugene Chittenden

... his income was required of Palgrave. He possessed that gift to an expert degree. But he was no easy mark, no mere degenerate who hacked off great chunks of a splendid fortune for the sake of violent exercise. He was too indolent for violence, too inherently fastidious for degeneracy. And deep down somewhere in a nature that had had no incentive to develop, there was the fag end of that family shrewdness ...
— Who Cares? • Cosmo Hamilton

... disappear, and from which waves of bulk enormous would roll outwards, to meet in wild conflict with the giant waves of other convulsions, or return to hiss and sputter against the intensely heated and fast foundering mass, whose violent upheaval had first elevated and sent them abroad. Such would be the probable state of things during the times of the earlier gneiss and mica schist deposits,—times buried deep in that chaotic night or "evening" which must have continued to exist for mayhap many ages after ...
— The Testimony of the Rocks - or, Geology in Its Bearings on the Two Theologies, Natural and Revealed • Hugh Miller

... camped in Owl Gulch, a steep, narrow defile, little more than a crack in the huge walls of surrounding rock; and the next day, after much arduous and violent climbing for horses and men up the gulch and over the low back of a mountain, they passed down into a quiet little valley, just as the sun sank behind the tops of ...
— The Cave of Gold - A Tale of California in '49 • Everett McNeil

... to do to comfort her. She was, as I have said, like one distracted, and went raving about the cabin, crying out she was undone! undone! she should be drowned! and the like. And at last, the ship giving a jerk, by the force, I suppose, of some violent wave, it threw poor Amy quite down, for she was weak enough before with being sea-sick, and as it threw her forward, the poor girl struck her head against the bulk-head, as the seamen call it, of the cabin, and laid her as dead as a stone ...
— The Fortunate Mistress (Parts 1 and 2) • Daniel Defoe


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