callous
51Obdurate — Ob du*rate, a. [L. obduratus, p. p. of obdurare to harden; ob (see Ob )+ durare to harden, durus hard. See {Dure}.] 1. Hardened in feelings, esp. against moral or mollifying influences; unyielding; hard hearted; stubbornly wicked. [1913 Webster]… …
52Obdurately — Obdurate Ob du*rate, a. [L. obduratus, p. p. of obdurare to harden; ob (see Ob )+ durare to harden, durus hard. See {Dure}.] 1. Hardened in feelings, esp. against moral or mollifying influences; unyielding; hard hearted; stubbornly wicked. [1913… …
53Obdurateness — Obdurate Ob du*rate, a. [L. obduratus, p. p. of obdurare to harden; ob (see Ob )+ durare to harden, durus hard. See {Dure}.] 1. Hardened in feelings, esp. against moral or mollifying influences; unyielding; hard hearted; stubbornly wicked. [1913… …
54Clash of the Champions — The Clash of the Champions logo Genre Wrestling Country of origin …
55The Undertaker — Pour les articles homonymes, voir The Undertaker (homonymie). Mark William Calaway …
56hard — /hahrd/, adj., harder, hardest, adv., harder, hardest, n. adj. 1. not soft; solid and firm to the touch; unyielding to pressure and impenetrable or almost impenetrable. 2. firmly formed; tight: a hard knot. 3. difficult to do or accomplish;… …
57harden — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. anneal, fire; steel; congeal, thicken (see hardness); accustom, inure, blunt. See habit, insensibility. Ant., soften. II (Roget s IV) v. 1. [To make less pervious] Syn. steel, temper, anneal, solidify …
58unfeeling — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) adj. hard[ hearted], cold [ blooded], cruel; heartless, inhuman, callous, dispassionate; merciless, pitiless, unmerciful, relentless, adamant. See insensibility, malevolence. II (Roget s IV) modif. 1.… …
59pachydermatous — adjective 1. emotionally hardened a callous indifference to suffering cold blooded and indurate to public opinion • Syn: ↑callous, ↑indurate • Similar to: ↑insensitive • Derivationally re …
60callose — I. ˈkaˌlōs adjective Etymology: International Scientific Vocabulary call (from Latin callum hard skin) + ose; originally formed in French more at callous : having protuberant hardened spots …