Primary
''recalcitrant'' ▫ᴱᴺ|Definition|1st|20250816013521-00-⌔
recalcitrant - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
English
Adjective
recalcitrant (comparative more recalcitrant, superlative most recalcitrant)
- Marked by a stubborn unwillingness to obey authority.
- ✤ His nimble fancy was recalcitrant to mental discipline.1
- ✤ There was something in her manner so reminiscent of the school teacher reprimanding a recalcitrant pupil that Mr. Snyder’s sense of humor came to his rescue.2
- ✤ The incentive to this first-class performance was a 14 min. late start from Hellifield, due to a recalcitrant van door which could not be properly secured.3
- ✤ Kenya’s official “Cowan Plan,” named after a colonial prison administrator, decreed that recalcitrant prisoners “be manhandled to the site and forced to carry out the task.”4
- ✤ Once pregnant, women were typically kept at hard labor until until their fifth month and recalcitrant pregnant women were made to lie in trenches that accommodated their bellies so that they could be beaten without harming the unborn child.5
- Unwilling to cooperate socially.
- Difficult to deal with or to operate.
- ✤ The more labile organic constituents of complex dissolved and particulate organic matter are commonly hydrolyzed and metabolized more rapidly than more recalcitrant organic compounds that are less accessible enzymatically.6
- ✤ The Hansa had no legal status, independent finances or a common institutional framework, while the major weapon against recalcitrant members (or opponents) was the threat of embargo.7
- ✤ Particularly recalcitrant examples which made it impossible to remove actual words while maintaining the balance of the set were resolved by altering a consonant in the base word to create a new base form.8
- ✤ However, when a clinician is faced with a more recalcitrant case, it is important to remember to ask the patient whether psychological, social, or occupational stress might be contributing to the activity of the skin disorder.9
- ✤ The temptation is to regard him [John Ogdon] as an idiot savant, a big talent bottled inside a recalcitrant body and accompanied by a personality that seems not just unremarkable, but almost entirely blank.10
- (botany, of seed, pollen, spores) Not viable for an extended period; damaged by drying or freezing.
Noun
recalcitrant (plural recalcitrants)
- A person who is recalcitrant.
Etymology
Borrowed from French récalcitrant, in derived from Latin recalcitrāns, recalcitrantis, present participle of recalcitrō, recalcitrāre (“be disobedient, kick back [as a horse]”), from calx (“heel”), 1820s.
Pronunciation
- IPA: /ɹɪˈkæl.sɪ.tɹənt/
- Audio (Australian): 🔊
Printed 2026-06-28.
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Link to original Footnotes
1908, Edith Wharton, “In Trust”, in The Hermit and the Wild Woman and Other Stories: ↩
1914, P. G. Wodehouse, Death at the Excelsior: ↩
1958 August, Cecil J. Allen, “British Locomotive Practice and Performance”, in Railway Magazine, page 560: ↩
1959 June 8, “Kenya: The Hola Scandal”, in Time: ↩
2008, Harriet A. Washington, “Southern Discomfort”, in Medical Apartheid , Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, page 63: ↩
2003, Robert G. Wetzel, “Solar radiation as an ecosystem modulator”, in E. Walter Helbling, Horacio Zagarese, editors, UV Effects in Aquatic Organisms and Ecosystems, page 13: ↩
2004, Derek W. Urwin, Germany: From Geographical Expression to Regional Accommodation, in Michael Keating (editor), Regions and Regionalism in Europe, page 47: ↩
2006, Janet Pierrehumbert, “Syllable structure and word structure: a study of triconsonantal clusters in English”, in Patricia A. Keating, editor, Phonological Structure and Phonetic Form, page 179: ↩
2010, Brian J. Hall, John C. Hall, Sauer’s Manual of Skin Diseases, page 251: ↩
2014 May 11, Ivan Hewett, “Piano Man: a Life of John Ogdon by Charles Beauclerk, review: A new biography of the great British pianist whose own genius destroyed him [print version: A colossus off-key, 10 May 2014, p. R27]”, in The Daily Telegraph (Review) : ↩
Secondary
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