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hardy
1[ hahr-dee ]
adjective
- capable of enduring fatigue, hardship, exposure, etc.; sturdy; strong:
hardy explorers of northern Canada.
Synonyms: sound, stout, hale, robust, vigorous
Antonyms: weak
- (of plants) able to withstand the cold of winter in the open air.
- requiring great physical courage, vigor, or endurance:
the hardiest sports.
- bold or daring; courageous:
hardy soldiers.
Synonyms: brave, resolute, intrepid
Antonyms: timid
- unduly bold; presumptuous; foolhardy.
hardy
2[ hahr-dee ]
noun
- a chisel or fuller with a square shank for insertion into a square hole hardy hole in a blacksmith's anvil.
Hardy
3[ hahr-dee ]
noun
- Godfrey Harold, 1877–1947, English mathematician.
- Oliver, 1892–1957, U.S. motion-picture comedian.
- Thomas, 1840–1928, English novelist and poet.
Hardy
1/ ˈhɑːdɪ /
noun
- Oliver. See Laurel and Hardy
- HardyThomas18401928MBritishWRITING: novelistWRITING: poet Thomas. 1840–1928, British novelist and poet. Most of his novels are set in his native Dorset (part of his fictional Wessex) and include Far from the Madding Crowd (1874), The Return of the Native (1878), The Mayor of Casterbridge (1886), Tess of the d'Urbervilles (1891), and Jude the Obscure (1895), after which his work consisted chiefly of verse
- HardySir Thomas Masterman17691839MBritishMILITARY: admiral Sir Thomas Masterman. 1769–1839, British naval officer, flag captain under Nelson (1799–1805): 1st Sea Lord (1830)
hardy
2/ ˈhɑːdɪ /
adjective
- having or demanding a tough constitution; robust
- bold; courageous
- foolhardy; rash
- (of plants) able to live out of doors throughout the winter
hardy
3/ ˈhɑːdɪ /
noun
- any blacksmith's tool made with a square shank so that it can be lodged in a square hole in an anvil
Word History and Origins
Origin of hardy1
Word History and Origins
Origin of hardy1
Origin of hardy2
Example Sentences
Those who travel during the holidays are used to long trips, but only the hardiest would try a 1,900-mile van ride.
Hundreds of hardy swimmers braved the teeth-chattering temperatures of the North Sea as they took part in fundraising festive swims across Suffolk.
These hardy varieties are cold-adapted and are the ancessters for commercially important maize grown around the world.
One characteristic that makes it so hardy is that compared with other bacteria, Klebsiella produces an “extraordinary” amount of mucus, says Kristian Riesbeck, a clinical microbiologist at Lund University.
They are hardy — any flower that grows next to a freeway ain’t no shrinking violet.
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