单词 | stark |
释义 | † starkn.2 Scottish. Obsolete. An implement used in dressing leather. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > equipment for working with skins or leather > [noun] > for dressing leather flesh-board1411 stark1541 stuffing wheel1882 glassing-jacka1884 stuffing drum1897 fleshing-board- 1541 in J. Stuart Extracts Council Reg. Aberdeen (1844) I. 176 Item, ane stark to vork the ledder vpoun, with thair feytt. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2016; most recently modified version published online September 2021). † starkn.3 Obsolete. rare. Apparently only attested in dictionaries or glossaries. A redstart (genus Phoenicurus); = redstart n. 1. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > family Muscicapidae (thrushes, etc.) > subfamily Turdinae > [noun] > genus Phoenicurus > species phoenicurus (redstart) redtail1544 redstart1553 stark1611 firetail1752 star finch1752 brandtail1802 redstart warbler1815 firebrand1848 fiery brandtail1853 fireflirt1883 1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Rossignol de muraille, a Starke, a Red-tayle. 1659 G. Torriano Florio's Vocabolario Italiano & Inglese A starke (or red taile) codirosse. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2016; most recently modified version published online June 2021). Starkn.4 Physics. attributive. Used with reference to an effect in which spectral lines of atoms or molecules are split, broadened, or shifted due to the presence of a strong electric field. Esp. in Stark effect, Stark shift, Stark splitting. Cf. Zeeman n. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > physics > atomic physics > decomposition of light, spectrum > [noun] > effect involving electrostatic field Stark1914 1914 G. E. Hale in Publ. Astron. Soc. Pacific 26 147 If the Stark effect exists in the Sun its magnitude appears to be so small that special methods..will be required to detect it. 1936 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) A. 235 345 We do not, at present, possess enough knowledge of either the magnitude or the asymmetry of crystalline fields to be able to calculate the Stark splitting directly. 1951 D. Bohm Quantum Theory xix. 471 The higher levels will exhibit more complex patterns for the Stark shift, because more degenerate levels will, in general, be involved. 1979 Physical Rev. A. 20 504/2 Stark-broadening parameters for the brighter isolated tin lines are given in Table VI. 2000 New Scientist 29 Apr. 64/2 (advt.) Integrated fast tuneable lasers using the quantum confined Stark effect as the tuning mechanism. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2016; most recently modified version published online March 2022). starkadj.n.1adv.α. Old English (rare)–early Middle English starc, Old English–early Middle English stearc, early Middle English starrc ( Ormulum), early Middle English starrke ( Ormulum, plural), early Middle English stær (perhaps transmission error), early Middle English stærc, early Middle English steorc, early Middle English sterc, Middle English stake (transmission error), Middle English–1500s sterk, Middle English–1500s sterke, Middle English–1600s starck, Middle English–1600s starcke, Middle English–1600s starke, Middle English– stark, 1500s stercke, 1800s staak (English regional (Leicestershire)), 1800s staark (English regional (Westmorland)), 1800s ztark (English regional (Dorset)); Scottish pre-1700 starck, pre-1700 starge, pre-1700 starke, pre-1700 starte (perhaps transmission error), pre-1700 1700s– stark, pre-1700 1800s– sterk. β. Old English streac, early Middle English strake, Middle English strak. γ. early Middle English sterch, Middle English starch. A. adj. (and n.1) a. Of a material substance: hard to the touch, resistant to pressure, unyielding. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > constitution of matter > hardness > types of hardness > [adjective] > stiff or rigid stithc897 stiff1000 starkOE inflexiblec1400 rigent?1440 unbowable1537 staffish1545 steya1586 unpliablea1618 rigid1618 unsupple1621 unpliant1624 immercurial1637 steeve1637 starky1657 impliablea1734 tharf1747 stiff as a poker1798 unbending1802 unbowsome1818 crisp1851 unbendable1884 poker-stiff1894 unfluxile1925 OE Ælfric Lives of Saints (Julius) (1881) I. 196 Stanas magon hnexian, and þæt starce isen on leades gelicnysse, ærðan þe se geleafa mæge..beon æfre adwæsced. c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 999 & oþerr stund itt [sc. bread] bakenn wass Full harrd. & starrc inn ofne. a1475 Sidrak & Bokkus (Lansd.) (1998) I. l. 4525 Yren is so hard and stark And men to worche it haþ greet cark. 1588 J. Penry Exhort. Wales (new ed.) 11 Though in their stomacks it should turne into starke iron. 1887 W. Morris tr. Homer Odyssey II. 361 I will hold me hard as the iron or some stark stone to the end. b. figurative. Of a person, or a person's heart, character, etc.: hard, obdurate; (also in favourable sense) firm, resolute. Obsolete.In Old English also in the compound stearc-heort stout-hearted. ΘΚΠ the mind > will > decision > constancy or steadfastness > [adjective] fasteOE stathelfasteOE anredOE hardOE starkOE trueOE steadfast993 fastredeOE stithc1000 findyOE stablea1275 stathelyc1275 stiffc1275 stablec1290 steel to the (very) backa1300 unbowinga1300 stably13.. firm1377 unmovablea1382 constantc1386 abidingc1400 toughc1400 sure1421 unmoblea1425 unfaintedc1425 unfaint1436 permanent?a1475 stalwartc1480 unbroken1513 immovable1534 inconcuss1542 unshaken1548 stout1569 unwavering1570 undiscourageable1571 fixed1574 discourageable1576 unappalled1578 resolute1579 unremoved1583 resolved1585 unflexiblea1586 unshakeda1586 square1589 unstooping1597 iron1598 rocky1601 steady1602 undeclinable1610 unboweda1616 unfainting1615 unswayed1615 staunch1624 undiscourageda1628 staid1631 unshook1633 blue?1636 true blue?1636 tenacious1640 uncomplying1643 yieldless1651 riveting1658 unshakened1659 inconquerable1660 unyielding1677 unbendinga1688 tight1690 unswerving1694 unfaltering1727 unsubmitting1730 undeviating1732 undrooping1736 impervertible1741 undamped1742 undyingc1765 sturdy1775 stiff as a poker1798 unfickle1802 indivertible1821 thick and thin1822 undisheartened1827 inconvertible1829 straightforward1829 indomitable1830 stickfast1831 unsuccumbing1833 unturnable1847 unswerved1849 undivertible1856 unforsaking1862 swerveless1863 steeve1870 rock-ribbed1884 stiff in the back1897 the mind > will > decision > obstinacy or stubbornness > [adjective] starkOE moodyOE stithc1000 stidyc1175 stallc1275 harda1382 stubbornc1386 obstinate?1387 throa1400 hard nolleda1425 obstinant?a1425 pertinacec1425 stablec1440 dour1488 unresigned1497 difficultc1503 hard-necked1530 pertinatec1534 obstacle1535 stout-stomached1549 hard-faced1567 stunt1581 hard-headed1583 pertinacious1583 stuntly1583 peremptory1589 stomachous1590 mulish1600 stomachful1600 obstined1606 restive1633 obstinacious1649 opinionated1649 tenacious1656 iron-sided1659 sturdy1664 cat-witted1672 obstinated1672 unyielding1677 ruggish1688 bullet-headed1699 tough1780 pelsy1785 stupid1788 hard-set1818 thick and thin1822 stuntya1825 rigwiddie1826 indomitable1830 recalcitrant1830 set1848 mule-headed1870 muley1871 capitose1881 hard-nosed1917 tight1928 OE Cynewulf Elene 565 Heo wæron stearce, stane heardran, noldon þæt geryne rihte cyðan. OE Beowulf (2008) 2552 Let ða of breostum, ða he gebolgen wæs, Wedergeata leod word ut faran, stearcheort styrmde. c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 1596 & ȝiff þin heorrte iss harrd. & starrc. & stedefasst o criste. a1225 (?OE) MS Lamb. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1868) 1st Ser. 5 Ne beo þu þereuore prud ne wilde ne sterc ne wemod ne ouer modi. c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) l. 11816 Strong mon wes Frolle and sterc [c1300 Otho starc] mon on mode. a1400 Cato's Distichs (Fairf.) l. 33 in R. Morris Cursor Mundi (1878) III. App. iv. 1669 If richesse come þe rife..be noȝt starke to freindis. spende þou fulle hertli..þi gift wiþ þe weindis. ?1591 R. Bruce Serm. Sacrament v. sig. S5 Swa then, wald thou knaw, quhither thy faith be strong or not, quhither thy perswasion of Gods mercie, be starke or not? 1836 T. P. Thompson Exercises (1842) IV. 91 Against Tallow-plots, however, the Whig government was stark. c. Of a question, science, etc.: hard to understand or answer; difficult, impenetrable. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > intelligibility > unintelligibility > depth, obscurity > [adjective] higheOE dighela1000 deepc1000 darkOE starkOE dusk?c1225 subtle1340 dimc1350 subtilea1393 covert1393 mystica1398 murka1400 cloudyc1400 hard?c1400 mistyc1400 unclearc1400 diffuse1430 abstractc1450 diffused?1456 exquisitec1460 obnubilous?a1475 obscure?a1475 covered1484 intricate?a1500 nice?a1500 perplexeda1500 difficilea1513 difficult1530 privy1532 smoky1533 secret1535 abstruse?1549 difficul1552 entangled1561 confounded1572 darksome1574 obnubilate1575 enigmatical1576 confuse1577 mysteriousa1586 Delphic1598 obfuscatea1600 enfumed1601 Delphicala1603 obstruse1604 abstracted1605 confused1611 questionable1611 inevident1614 recondite1619 cryptic1620 obfuscated1620 transcendent1624 Delphian1625 oraculous1625 enigmatic1628 recluse1629 abdite1635 undilucidated1635 clouded1641 benighted1647 oblite1650 researched1653 obnubilated1658 obscurative1664 tenebrose1677 hyperbyssal1691 condite1695 diffusive1709 profound1710 tenebricose1730 oracular1749 opaque1761 unenlightening1768 darkling1795 offuscating1798 unrecognizable1817 tough1820 abstrusive1848 obscurant1878 out-of-focus1891 unplumbable1895 inenubilable1903 non-transparent1939 OE tr. Chrodegang of Metz Regula Canonicorum (Corpus Cambr. 191) lxxxi. 331 Niwon folce and flæsclicum opene þing and gemænlice ma sceal bodian, næs na uplice þing ne stearce [L. ardua]. c1485 ( G. Hay Bk. Law of Armys (2005) 131 Here speris the doctour a stark questioun. c1485 ( G. Hay Bk. Gouernaunce of Princis (1993) xviii. 85 Na traist nocht jn jgnorant mennis wordis yat sais..yat the science of thame [sc. the stars] is sa stark, yat nane may knaw jt. 1910 Times Weekly 30 Dec. 1030/2 'S'pose there is a Santa Claus?.. Why's he got to come down chimbleys? He could do it by 'lectric, couldn't he? And how can he climb down all the chimbleys in London the same night?' These were stark questions. d. Of a judgement: stern, unchangeable, set in stone. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ society > authority > strictness > [adjective] > strict or severe (of rules, judgement, or discipline) strongeOE starkc1175 sharpa1340 strait1390 unrelaxed1508 exacta1538 severe1562 strict1578 weightya1616 stringent1846 ramrod1850 medieval1917 tough1961 c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 8802 He ȝifeþþ himm..witt & mihht to drædenn godd. & hise starrke domess. ?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 115 Þe sterke dom of domesdei. 2. Violent, harsh, severe. a. Of a natural agency or phenomenon (as the cold, wind, fire, waves, etc.): fierce or violent in operation; severe, punishing. Now chiefly Scottish and rare. Sc. National Dict. (at cited word) records this sense as still in use in Orkney in 1971.Quot. 1850 is a translation of quot. eOE. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > manner of action > violent action or operation > [adjective] > specifically of natural agencies starkeOE steer13.. savagea1393 wightc1400 violentc1425 rageousc1450 bolda1522 masterfula1522 shouldering1747 eOE Metres of Boethius (partly from transcript of damaged MS) (2009) xii. 14 Bið eac swa same monna æghwilc micle þy fægenra liðes weðres, gif hine lytle ær stormas gestondað and se stearca wind norðan and eastan. lOE King Ælfred tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. (Bodl.) (2009) I. xxxiv. 327 Þæt treow bið uton gescyrped and beweroð [read bewerod] mid þære rinde wið ðone winter and wið ða stearcan stormas and eac wið þære sunnan hæto on sumera. c1225 (?c1200) St. Margaret (Bodl.) (1934) 20 Al warð þet stude ful of strong & of stearc [c1225 Royal starc] stench. c1225 (?c1200) St. Juliana (Royal) 588 Þer arisen stormes starcke & stronge & breken þe schipes bord. c1275 (?c1250) Owl & Nightingale (Calig.) (1935) 524 Ac wane niȝtes cumeþ longe, & bringeþ forstes starke an stronge. c1330 Seven Sages (Auch.) (1933) 1989 Þe clerkes to þe stage stale, And bet a fir strong and sterk. ?a1400 (a1338) R. Mannyng Chron. (Petyt) ii. 174 Þe hungre was so grete, & þe cold so stark. c1430 (c1390) G. Chaucer Parson's Tale (Cambr. Gg.4.27) (1877) §841 Auouteryis schuln been in helle in a stark [c1405 Ellesmere stank, c1415 Lansd. stinkinge; Fr. estanc, L. stagnum] brennynge fere of bronston. c1450 (a1400) Libeaus Desconus (Calig. A.ii) (1969) l. 1766 (MED) A fere stark and store Was lyȝt and brende bryȝt. a1586 J. Maitland in W. A. Craigie Maitland Folio MS (1919) I. 285 Fluidis with gritter force ay flowis and starkar stevin, quhone stoppit ar þe stremis. 1606 A. Craig Amorose Songes sig. Iiii And though the streams be stark, I through the waltering waues shall swim. 1636 A. Montgomerie Cherrie & Slae (new ed.) 1529 The streame is there so starke,..It should be idle work. 1686 J. Goad Astro-meteorologica ii. xiv. 348 June 24. & 29. Stark Rain and Thunder. 1790 A. Wilson Poems 184 My friends, for G—d sake! quat yer wark, Nor think to war a wind sae stark. 1850 M. F. Tupper tr. King Alfred's Poems xii. 53 The stark wind East by North Lately rush'd in anger forth. 1929 H. Marwick Orkney Norn 177/2 Stark, intense, furious, blinding, stifling (of snow); ‘a stark moor’, an intense, blinding snow; ‘stark drift’. b. Of the weather, climate, a season, etc.: harsh, inclement. Formerly also: †(of a place) characterized by such weather (obsolete). ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > weather and the atmosphere > weather > bad weather > [adjective] starkOE unkindc1330 foulc1390 distemperate1398 distempered1490 untemperate1525 intemperate1526 naughty1541 intempered1556 unkindly1579 sour1582 unclement1598 filthy1600 nasty1634 dirty1660 inclement1667 inclemental1709 wretched1711 foul-weather1750 ungenial1816 wersh1830 shabby1853 OE Ælfric's Colloquy (1991) 20 Non est tam aspera hiemps ut audeam latere domi : nys hit swa stearc winter þæt ic durre lutian æt ham. c1485 ( G. Hay Bk. Law of Armys (2005) 54 Quhen he come the frost, and snaw was sa fell—and sa stark weder. 1611 B. Jonson Catiline i. sig. C The North is not so starke, and cold. View more context for this quotation 1866 G. H. Hollister Thomas a Becket 122 'Twas January, very stark and cold; A fall of snow had hid the travelled ways. 1878 W. Dickinson Gloss. Words & Phrases Cumberland (ed. 2) Stark weather, continued dry and cold north and east winds. 1913 Daily Graphic 24 Mar. 12/1 The season is early, the weather stark and unpromising. 1959 K. McNaught Prophet in Politics xvi. 233 The slight and dignified host, his hair and beard already streaked with white and his health far from robust, made no concession to the stark climate of the prairie capital. 1998 P. Honan Shakespeare: A Life (1999) xiv. 274 There is no sign that he regretted stark winters, but freezing weather brings no cheer..in his new play [sc. Hamlet]. 2011 Yorks. Evening Post (Nexis) 11 Jan. It's a place of incredible beauty, quite stark weather at times, one of the greatest concentrations of wildlife on earth. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > adversity > [adjective] > full of hardship hardOE soreOE starkOE difficult1562 flinty1613 rugged1663 rough1709 rude1735 tough1890 OE Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 2nd Ser. (Cambr. Gg.3.28) x. 89 He nolde awendan his gewunelican bigleofan..ac ða stiðnyssa his stearcan bigleofan betwux læwedum folce on his life geheold. OE tr. Chrodegang of Metz Regula Canonicorum (Corpus Cambr. 191) lxxxi. 331 Witodlice sume geriht stearc [L. dura] þreaung, sume milde tihting. a1225 ( Ælfric's Homily De Duodecim Abusivis (Lamb. 487) in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1868) 1st Ser. 105 (MED) Þe fifte mihte..is gastliche blisse þet þe mon on god blissie bitwuxe þa sorinessen þissere sterke [OE Corpus Cambr. 178 reðan] worlde. c1300 St. Sebastian (Laud) 48 in C. Horstmann Early S.-Eng. Legendary (1887) 179 With quareles and with Arewene heo maden him woundes starke. ?a1400 (a1338) R. Mannyng Chron. (Petyt) ii. 98 Bot Henry þink it stark, þat he is charged so To gyue þre þousand mark & bonden be þerto. ?a1400 (a1338) R. Mannyng Chron. (Petyt) ii. 21 Tille Elfride oure kyng com tiþinges starke. a1525 J. Irland Of Penance & Confession in W. A. Craigie Asloan MS (1923) I. 4 The stark pvnicioun of God is able to strike upon thé. d. Of a person, or a person's heart, character, etc.: harsh, severe, pitiless. In later use chiefly with reference to the characterization of William the Conqueror in the Anglo-Saxon Chron. (cf. quot. lOE). Now rare.Recorded earliest in the Old English compound stearc-ferhð harsh-hearted, pitiless (in quot. used as noun). ΘΚΠ society > authority > strictness > [adjective] > severe or stern wrothc893 retheeOE stithc897 starkOE sternOE hardOE dangerous?c1225 sharpa1340 asperc1374 austerec1384 shrewda1387 snella1400 sternful?a1400 unsterna1400 dour?a1425 piquant1521 tetrical1528 tetric1533 sorea1535 rugged?1548 severe1548 hard-handed1611 Catonian1676 tetricous1727 heavy1849 acerbic1853 stiff1856 Catonic1883 tough1905 the world > action or operation > behaviour > bad behaviour > harshness or severity > [adjective] heavyc825 retheeOE stithc897 hardeOE starkOE sternOE dangerous?c1225 sharp?c1225 unsoftc1275 sturdy1297 asperc1374 austerec1384 shrewda1387 snella1400 sternful?a1400 dour?a1425 thrallc1430 piquant1521 tetrical1528 tetric1533 sorea1535 rugged?1548 severe1548 iron1574 harsh1579 strict1600 angry1650 Catonian1676 Draconic1708 tetricous1727 alkaline1789 acerbic1853 stiff1856 acerbate1869 acerbitous1870 Draconian1876 Catonic1883 OE Cynewulf Juliana 636 Ða wæs gelæded londmearce neah ond to þære stowe þær hi stearcferþe þurh cumbolhete cwellan þohtun. lOE Anglo-Saxon Chron. (Laud) anno 1086 He [sc. William the Conqueror] wæs milde þam godum mannum..& ofer eall gemett stearc þam mannum þe wiðcwædon his willan. c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 4587 Ah he wes swiðe sturne. & stærc [c1300 Otho starc] wið þeon folke. a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 23275 (MED) Þaa men þat sa starck war her..sal haue euer þat water cald [in hell]. 1819 J. Lingard Hist. Eng. I. viii. 450 Moreover he [sc. William] was a very stark man, and very savage: so that no man durst do any thing against his will. 1876 Ld. Tennyson Harold ii. ii. 50 For he is only debonair to those That follow where he leads, but stark as death To those that cross him. 1891 Q. Rev. July 190 This great Emperor was stark to all the opponents of Christianity. 1963 C. Brooke Saxon & Norman Kings x. 173 He was a hard man, a stark man... William still inspires us only with fear. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > manner of action > violent action or operation > [adjective] > carried on violently stithc1000 strongOE starkOE storlicc1275 stourc1275 sharpc1381 stalwartc1420 sturdya1450 sorea1500 vehement1531 shrewd1576 perperacute1647 furied1878 OE [implied in: Anglo-Saxon Chron. (Tiber. B.iv) anno 1016 Þa gewende se here sona to Lundenne, & þa buruh utan ymbesæton, & hyre stearclice on feaht ægðær ge be wætere ge be lande. (at starkly adv. 1)]. c1275 (?c1250) Owl & Nightingale (Calig.) (1935) 1176 Þe hule..ȝef ondsware starke & stronge. c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) l. 8218 Aurilie þe king & moni þusend..bigunnen þer oðer fæht þe wes feond-liche stærc. c1380 Sir Ferumbras (1879) l. 3241 Þan at þe furste þe Assaut by-gan sterk & strait to be. c1450 in K. Sisam 14th Cent. Verse & Prose (1933) l. 14 (MED) Heuy hamerys þei han..Stark strokes þei stryken. c1485 ( G. Hay Bk. Law of Armys (2005) 113 He wist wele, and he had scapit, he wald nocht haue cessit to mak him starkare were than before. 1823 London Mag. Apr. 418 I have had a stark fight for ye, and ye maun wed me soon. 1856 W. E. Aytoun Bothwell iv. ix. 114 I'd meet him as a knight, And do stark battle to the death. 1897 M. Armour Fall of Nibelungs ii. xxxiii. 218 Comrade, seest thou my brother beset by the stark blows of the Huns? 1915 J. Lang Bk. of Myths 249 He dealt with his sword stark blows on those children of the deep who would fain have devoured him. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > hire or rent > rent (land or real property) > [adjective] > having high rent stark at the rent1683 1683 G. Meriton York-shire Dialogue in Pure Nat. Dial. 51 And yet you say your Farme is starke att'th Rent [1685 starke 'oth Rent; but Gloss. has Stark at the Rent, is very dear at the Rent.] 3. Strong, stout, powerful. a. Of an object or thing. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > [adjective] > quality of, generally starkOE stiffc1250 sterna1400 vengeablec1400 unwieldya1547 vengefula1586 mistempered1597 maiden1598 lathen1843 humane1970 OE Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 1st Ser. (Royal) (1997) xxix. 424 Ða ða Decius þæt geaxode þa het he hine wædum bereafian & mid stearcum stengum beatan. c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) l. 10592 Arður þe ræie Ron [i.e. his spear] nom an honde. he stræhte scaft stærcne stiðimoden king. c1300 Havelok (Laud) (1868) 380 In his hand a spere stark. c1480 (a1400) St. Christopher 339 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) I. 349 Quhen þat christofore þis prayere had mad..his staf, þat was sture & stark, was cled with lewis, & with bark. c1550 Complaynt Scotl. (1979) iii. 22 Than the father takkis ane batton or sum vthir sterk vappin to puneise his sonne. 1773 R. Fergusson Poems 120 Frae a stark Lochaber aix He gat a clamihewit. 1895 S. R. Crockett Men of Moss-hags vi. 47 The crossbar and simple Italian guard of Wat Gordon's lighter weapon seemed as if it must instantly be beaten down by the starker weapon of the dragoon. (b) Chiefly Scottish. Of a structure or material: strong, substantial, sturdily made. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > constitution of matter > strength > [adjective] hardeOE strongOE stithOE starkc1275 sturdyc1374 brazena1382 mighty?1448 boisterous?1571 oaky1631 stout1765 pang1813 c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 96 He makede enne stronge castel mid starke ston walle. c1300 St. Brendan (Harl.) 124 in C. Horstmann Early S.-Eng. Legendary (1887) 223 Þis hound ladde þis holi man to an halle, fair ynouȝ, Gret & starc & suyþe noble. c1450 (a1400) Libeaus Desconus (Calig. A.ii) (1969) l. 710 (MED) Þanne sawe þey yn a park A castell stout and stark. c1480 (a1400) St. Christina 10 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) II. 398 He mad a toure of lyme & stane, a starkare mocht be fundine nan. 1508 W. Kennedy Flyting (Chepman & Myllar) in Poems W. Dunbar (1998) I. 214 A stark gallowis, a wedy and a pyn, The hede poynt of thyne elderis armes ar. 1529 in C. Innes Registrum Episcopatus Aberdonensis (1845) I. 396 To big agan þe said brig..als stark and substantious as we resave þe samyn. a1572 J. Knox Hist. Reformation Scotl. in Wks. (1846) I. 177 [He] cryed, ‘Fyre, fyre,’ (for the door was verray stark). 1609 in Extracts Rec. Convent. Burghs Scotl. (1870) II. 284 All cowperis sall mak their hering barrellis ticht, stark, and sufficient treyis. a1628 J. Carmichaell Coll. Prov. in Scots (1957) 57 A strong theif sould have a stark tow. 1666 Pleugh-song in J. Forbes Cantus (ed. 2) sig. I4v Bring with me my fair fresh ox, with all that belongs to the pleugh, soms of yron stark enough. 1755 R. Forbes Shop-bill in tr. Ovid Ajax his Speech (new ed.) 39 Fare may be had..The starkest hose that can be made. 1794 W. Anderson Piper of Peebles 6 The sarks were few, An very stark, but no' that saft. 1904 S. R. Crockett Raiderland 161 This is a guid stark bit whup. 1953 M. Traynor Eng. Dial. Donegal 281 That's far starker calico. a1978 A. S. Borrowman Buik o Ruth & Ither Wark in Lallans (1979) 25 Ay, it's an auld brugh [sc. Stirling], steeve and sterk. b. Of a person or animal: physically strong or powerful; lusty, robust, sturdy, vigorous. Also as n. Now rare (chiefly Scottish in later use). ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > [adjective] > of health: good > resistant to disease, etc. strongeOE stalworthc1175 starka1250 stiff1297 stalworthyc1300 vigorousc1330 stoura1350 lustyc1374 marrowya1382 sturdyc1386 crank1398 robust1490 vigorious1502 stalwart1508 hardy1548 robustious1548 of force1577 rustical1583 marrowed1612 rustic1620 robustic1652 solid1741 refractory1843 salted1864 resistant1876 saulteda1879 the world > life > the body > bodily constitution > bodily strength > [adjective] > robust strongeOE hardOE stalworthc1175 starka1250 stiff1297 steel to the (very) backa1300 stalworthyc1300 wightc1300 stable13.. valiant1303 stithc1325 toughc1330 wrast1338 stoura1350 sadc1384 wighty14.. derfc1440 substantialc1460 well-jointed1483 felon1487 robust1490 stalwart1508 stoutya1529 robustous?1531 rankc1540 hardy1548 robustious1548 stout1576 rustical1583 rustic1620 iron1638 robustic1652 swankinga1704 strapping1707 rugged1731 solid1741 vaudy1793 flaithulach1829 ironbark1833 swankie1838 tough as (old) boots or leather1843 skookum1847 hard (also tough, sharp) as nails1862 hard-assed1954 nails1974 the world > physical sensation > sight and vision > types of vision > [adjective] > clear- or sharp-sighted > clear or sharp (of sight) piercinga1400 clear1576 stark1589 lynceous1592 unshadowed1593 lyncean1622 cleared1642 unbeclouded1707 aquiline1791 bird-clear1938 a1250 in C. Brown Eng. Lyrics 13th Cent. (1932) 15 Ne mai strong ne starch [c1275 Calig. sterch, c1275 Laud starc, a1300 Jesus Oxf. sterk] ne kene a-ȝlye deth-is wiþer-clench. c1300 Havelok (Laud) (1868) l. 2027 (MED) He weren..Starke laddes, stalworþi men. c1400 (?a1300) Kyng Alisaunder (Laud) (1952) 5518 Jch wil þee ȝiue of golde a mark, And a stede stronge and stark. c1475 Mankind (1969) l. 368 (MED) He ys a goode starke laburrer. 1552 Abp. J. Hamilton Catech. Prol. f. 2 Lat nocht ye sterk man glore in his strenth. 1589 G. Puttenham Arte Eng. Poesie iii. xix. 202 There be some fowles of sight so prowd and starke, As can behold the sunne, and neuer shrinke. a1642 H. Best Farming & Memorandum Bks. (1984) 21 Throwe..your lambs out of the penne, for feare that your starke sheepe treade them under foote. 1663 ‘P. Stampoy’ Coll. Scotch Prov. 19 Fill fow, and had fow, makes a starke man. 1721 A. Ramsay Prospect of Plenty 183 A nation, healthfu' wise, and stark. 1786 R. Burns Poems & Songs (1968) I. 165 He gied me thee..An' fifty mark; Tho' it was sma', 'twas weel-won gear, An' thou was stark. 1805 W. Scott Lay of Last Minstrel i. xxi. 22 A stark moss-trooping Scott was he. 1836 W. Irving Astoria (1849) 158 The loss of two stark hunters and prime riflemen was a serious affair to the party. 1895 S. R. Crockett Men of Moss-hags xxv The dragoons were stark fellows and had seen service. 1937 Scotsman 8 June 12/1 She was the embodiment of the stark and sturdy woman of the North. 1999 N. Talbot in P. Faulkner & P. Preston William Morris ii. vi. 103 The stark fighting men who call themselves Champions of the Dry Tree oppose the vicious Burgers of the Four Friths in a way as destructive as heroic. 2007 D. Purves Ane Auld Sang 43 Steive an sterk ma bodie hauds the yird. ΘΚΠ society > authority > power > [adjective] mightyeOE craftyeOE richeOE strongeOE wieldeOE mainstrongOE mightOE keena1000 mightfullOE mainfulc1225 reighc1225 starkc1275 boldc1300 fort13.. mightandc1350 strengthya1382 mightifula1400 bigc1400 powerfulc1450 puissant?c1450 mananta1500 mighteousa1500 potenta1500 potential?c1500 vailing1508 forcible1555 potentate1556 swingeing1567 powerable1580 strong-handed1598 strengthful1604 hogen mogen1648 powerlike1657 pollent1660 hogana1672 swayful1767 reverend1826 oomphy1955 kick-ass1977 c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) l. 9310 Þis iherde Vther, þe king wes swiðe steorc. c1300 Havelok (Laud) (1868) 341 In þat time..Was in þe lon of denemark A riche king, and swyþe stark. a1350 in G. L. Brook Harley Lyrics (1968) 60 Ne is no quene so stark ne stour..þat ded ne shal by glyde. a1400 (c1303) R. Mannyng Handlyng Synne (Harl.) 6840 He was bysshope and patryarke Of Constatyne, noble starke. c1485 ( G. Hay Bk. Knychthede (1993) iii. 21 Ffor the office of knychthede suld have stark place jn gouernaunce. c1485 ( G. Hay Bk. Law of Armys (2005) 12 The maa, miraclis, the starkare was haly kirk. ffor ay the faith grewe starkare and starkare. 1543 in State Papers Henry VIII (1836) V. 588 All that be His Highnes servauntes and frendes must make theim starke, and to make the most frendes they can. 1596 J. Dalrymple tr. J. Leslie Hist. Scotl. (1888) I. 138 Frome yrland he sayles to Scotland, wt a strang and starke armie. 1693 Sc. Presbyterian Eloquence (ed. 2) 87 As stark as they were, God is starker. 1807 J. Barlow Columbiad vii. 260 Now roll, with kindling haste, the long stark lines, From wing to wing the sounding battle joins. 1915 Observer 9 May 10/4 No one will be stark and mighty enough to punish in such sort that their example shall never be followed in the world again. d. figurative. Chiefly Scottish. Of a reason, cause, sensation, etc.: strong, convincing, having a powerful effect. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > expectation > feeling of wonder, astonishment > quality of inspiring wonder > [adjective] > of wonder: powerful starkc1275 the world > existence and causation > causation > cause or reason > [adjective] > strong (of a reason) starkc1485 c1275 (?c1250) Owl & Nightingale (Calig.) (1935) 1473 Wundere me þungþ wel starc & stor [a1300 Jesus Oxf. stark & sor] Hu eni mon [etc.]. c1455 Quoniam Attachiamenta c. 56, in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue (at cited word) Tharfor throu starkar resoune he may well be vnderstandin to ioyis it gif. c1485 ( G. Hay Bk. Law of Armys (2005) 113 And ȝit ane othir mare stark resoun is, ffor the decreis sais, yat [etc.]. 1559 D. Lindsay Test. Papyngo 221 in Wks. (1931) I. Quhydder that I wes strickin in extasie, Or throuch one stark imagynatioun, Bot it apperit [etc.] 1587–8 in D. Masson Reg. Privy Council Scotl. (1881) 1st Ser. IV. 242 Upoun bettir avisement and starkare ressonis. 1596 J. Dalrymple tr. J. Leslie Hist. Scotl. (1888) I. 50 Of quhilke a stark rasone thay vse to collecte, that in..riueris in Irland, quhilkes..ar baith maist cleir, and maist pure, Salmonte in gretter number thair ar takne. 1640 R. Baillie Lett. & Jrnls. (1841) I. 286 It [sc. a petition] is now posting through the land for hands to make it stark. 2000 R. Fairnie Scots Tung Wittins (SCOTS) No. 78 The'r an ongaun difference in the European Pairlament anent whuther the minority leids shuid be includit in this or no an the starkest uphaud for haein thaim in is comin frae Eluned Morgan MEP (Wales) an Gorka Knorr Borras MEP (Catalonia). 2008 D. Ogston in R. Fairnie Scots Tung Wittins (SCOTS) No. 172 Caa forrit wie the sterk defence o the tongue. e. Originally Scottish. Of a substance, esp. liquor: strong, potent. Now rare. [In quot. 2005 after German Starkbier, lit. ‘strong beer’. In quot. 1864 probably intended to render Norwegian sterk.] ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > poison > [adjective] > having specific qualities (of poison) deadlyc1380 starkc1485 virulent1577 lingeringa1616 irritant1828 intoxicative1854 the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > types or qualities of intoxicating liquor > [adjective] > strong strongeOE stalec1300 mainc1400 nappyc1460 starkc1485 nase?1536 huff-cap1599 nippitatum1600 intoxicating1604 inebriating1610 distempering1613–18 inebriative1615 toxing1635 hogen mogen1653 napping1654 humming1675 hard1700 inebriousa1704 ebrietating1711 bead-proof1753 steeve1801 high-proof1810 pithy1812 stiff1813 inebriant1828 reverent1837 a little more north1864 ebriating1872 rorty1950 c1485 ( G. Hay Bk. Law of Armys (2005) 259 Yat he had drunkyn our stark wyne, or sum othir way, had jn foly and lichtnes maid his appellacioun. a1513 J. Irland Meroure of Wyssdome (1926) I. 55 The expert and gud medycinare geris nocht to the man that is nicht wait..oure stark medycyne. 1542 N. Udall tr. Erasmus Apophthegmes f. 103v Cantharis is a litle litle vermyn..but hauyng in it starke poyson. a1600 R. Lindsay Hist. & Cron. Scotl. (1899) I. 186 The Duik of Albanie send his familiear servand..for the wyne and prayit him to send of the best and starkest. 1633 Orkney Witch Trial in J. G. Dalyell Darker Superst. Scot. (1834) 153 Becaus the oyle was not stark enuch, he gat some aquavite to make it starker. 1679 in J. Fletcher et al. Beggers Bush (new ed.) v. i, in F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher 50 Comedies & Trag. sig. Mm2v/1 [Second Boor] Stark beer boy, stout and strong beer. 1835 D. Webster Orig. Sc. Rhymes 62 Of the stark aquavitae they baith lo'ed a drappie. 1864 C. I. Elton Norway 239 The host brought us in some spirit in a quaint glass jug, which he assured us was very ‘stark’. As its strength consisted merely in being saturated with peppercorns, we did not trouble it. 1870 J. K. Hunter Life Stud. Char. vi. 40 The gudeman and his wife had several tastings till it came to the right thing, the wife remarking that it was a stark dram [of whisky]. 1898 S. R. Crockett Standard Bearer xiv. 119 Doon at the clachans the stark Hollands flowed like water in a running spate. 2005 L. Hawthorne Beer Drinker's Guide Munich (ed. 5) 148/1 What hasn't been lost is Paulaner Keller's focus on beer, ‘stark’ beer. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > manner of action > vigour or energy > [adjective] > of action: involving or requiring vigour > carried out or proceeding with vigour stiffc1250 busyc1275 greatc1275 sternc1275 smart?a1400 stark1489 thronga1525 vigorous1524 stout1582 intensive1605 spiritful?1611 warm1627 intense1645 mettlesome1645 spirited1670 mettled1682 sturdy1697 energetic1700 vivid1702 robustful1800 toughish1840 lively1844 full out1920 1489 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (Adv.) xx. l. 8 A part to Norame went..And a stark assege [MS assegis] has set. c1600 R. Lindsay Hist. & Cron. Scotl. (1899) II. 195 That nycht the towne of Edinburgh keipit ane stark watch in the towne. c1600 Diurnal of Remarkable Occurrents (1833) 11 And in this mene tyme was stark watcheing in Edinh about kingis grace. 1865 J. D. Marwick High Constables ii. 53 Another act, on the 4th of April, ordered a wooden barras (or barrier) to be erected before the castle, and a stark watch to be set. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > colour > quality of colour > [adjective] > intense strongOE richc1330 finea1387 stark1547 deep1555 full1599 saturate1669 generous1710 lush1744 saturated1791 lushy1821 robust1826 raised1846 high-keyed1879 acid1916 1547 R. Record Vrinal of Physick 67 Greene is a compownde colour of blew and yellow..and the right greene have I in this booke called a starke greene. 4. a. Of a physical thing: stiff, rigid in form, not supple or flexible; esp. stiffened through drying, cold, or disuse. Formerly also: †bristly, prickly (obsolete). ΚΠ OE Ælfric Catholic Homilies: 1st Ser. (Royal) (1997) xxxviii. 518 Hi..ealne his lichaman mid stearcum wiððum, swa swa him beboden wæs, gewriðon. a1200 MS Trin. Cambr. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1873) 2nd Ser. 127 Weste was his wunienge and stark haire of oluente his wede. c1380 Sir Ferumbras (1879) l. 2118 Furst sche tok out þe croune sterk þat crist on is heued let. ?c1450 in Anglia (1896) 18 296 Ley it on þe hed þat hath gret werk, And hetyth [perh. read het yt] ageyn, whann it is stark [emended in ed. to sterk]. ?c1450 Life St. Cuthbert (1891) l. 950 (MED) Whils his leggys wer vp on hight, His clathes stode sterk, euen vp ryght, And hilde his leggis. ?c1450 Life St. Cuthbert (1891) l. 926 How cuthbert childe stode on his croune..; In his playng a wondir harke, his clathes aboute his leggys stode starke. 1582 Edinb. Test. X. 339 in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue (at cited word) He leuis to Thomas Broun his bruther..ane pair of blew schankis and tua round stark sarkis. 1591 G. Fletcher Of Russe Common Wealth ii. f. 4 You shall sensibly feele your breath to waxe starke, and euen stifeling with the colde, as you draw it in and out. 1602 in J. D. Marwick Rec. Convent. Royal Burghs Scotl. (1870) II. 143 Ilk skipper is haldin detbund to haue in his schipe stark cordellis and winding takill to sett in and out the merchandis guidis. 1713 W. Derham Physico-theol. x. i. 453 So soon as this Spring is become stark enough, it suddenly breaks the Case into two Halfs..and so flings the Seed. 1854 A. E. Baker Gloss. Northants. Words II. 291 Stark or Starky, stiff, dry. 1883 R. Bridges Prometheus 61 O heavenly fire,..O spirit of rage & might, Who canst unchain the links of winter stark. 1889 E. Peacock Gloss. Words Manley & Corringham, Lincs. (ed. 2) (at cited word) This smock's a deal oher stark, I can't wear it while [= until] its weshed. 1975 Lawrence (Kansas) Daily Jrnl.-World 21 Nov. 1/4 They would try to huddle with substitutes under the stiff stark ‘tents’ created from the pulled-off tarps along the sidelines. 2008 J. Phillips 100 Devotions for Pastors & Church Leaders II. lii. 116 The tubular-shaped body wrappings, stark and stiff like a canister, were empty. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > constitution of matter > hardness > types of hardness > [adjective] > taut stiffc1386 unrelaxed1508 taut1567 tight1576 strait1578 strict1578 starka1642 tense1671 stith1825 strict1860 stent1886 a1642 H. Best Farming & Memorandum Bks. (1984) 64 Soe that the bands will blowe aside with the winde and the rigginge blowe away, if yow doe not minde to pull the bands downe starke. 1788 W. Marshall Provincialisms E. Yorks. in Rural Econ. Yorks. II. 356 Stark, tight;..as a stark rope. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > land > landscape > wild or uncultivated land > [adjective] > barren or desert > waterless thirstya1425 carbuncled1577 unwatered1600 arid1656 starkc1740 thirstful1865 dry land1893 c1740 A. Allen MS. Gl. (E.D.D.) When ye ground is parch't and chop't wth droughth, they say ye ground is stark. 1839 W. Holloway Gen. Dict. Provincialisms (new ed.) 162/2 Ground is said to be very stark, or starked up, when the surface has been dried very suddenly after rain. Sussex. Hants. 1854 A. E. Baker Gloss. Northants. Words II. 291 The ground is so stark, the seeds will not come up. 1893 G. E. Dartnell & E. H. Goddard Gloss. Words Wilts. 156 The ground is got so stark. d. Of landscape or a feature in the landscape: stiff in outline or formation; (hence) bare, barren, desolate. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > land > landscape > [adjective] > scenic > wild savagec1330 unbenec1400 rudec1405 scragged1519 austere?1580 stark1799 stern1812 1799 Duchess of Devonshire Memorandums Face of Country Switzerland 84 Shivering half-starved firs were clinging to the stark rocks. 1833 H. Martineau Charmed Sea iv. 64 Snow was heaped on the eastern mountains, and tumbled in huge masses among the stark, black rocks at their base. 1847 R. W. Emerson Poems 199 Not of adamant and gold Built he heaven stark and cold. 1872 C. King Mountaineering in Sierra Nevada xii. 258 Among rigid crater rims and stark fields of volcanic sand. 1898 A. Conan Doyle Trag. Korosko v. 131 How cool and beautiful that green looked in the stark, abominable wilderness! 1913 N.Y. Times 21 Dec. c4/6 There is Rockwell Kent, for example, who once painted stark rocks jutting out into cold seas. 1965 M. Bradbury Stepping Westward vii. 343 On campus, many of the trees were now bare, the campanile stood out stark, and the convertibles now had their roofs up. 2012 B. Joyce Surrender ix. 199 The island was treeless, windswept, barren—so stark and desolate. 5. a. Of a living creature, or of the muscles, limbs, face, etc.: stiff, rigid, lacking suppleness and pliability (through weakness, overexertion, fear, age, cold, etc.). Hence also in extended use, of the senses, eyes, etc.: †not functioning properly (obsolete). ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > loose or stiff condition > [adjective] leathwakec1000 lithebyc1000 starka1275 stiffc1305 standing1340 bainc1440 waldinc1485 resolveda1500 supplea1500 lash1513 limber1582 sagging1599 laxed1623 unslakeda1625 laxated1652 springy1674 gangling1764 lithesome1768 swack1768 unslackened1770 lissoma1800 wandle1803 loose-limbed1823 loose1846 unslacked1848 saggy1853 loose-jointed1859 loose-hung1869 gangly1871 a1275 in C. Brown Eng. Lyrics 13th Cent. (1932) 61 Mine lonke armes, stiue & sterke. a1325 in C. Brown Relig. Lyrics 14th Cent. (1924) 1 Starke waren his armes hi-spred op-on þe rode. a1450 York Plays (1885) 417 I myght not stande, so was I starke [with fright]. a1500 (a1460) Towneley Plays (1994) I. iii. 36 My bonys ar so stark: No wonder if thay wark, For I am full old. a1529 J. Skelton Magnyfycence (?1530) sig. Biiv A knokylbonyarde wyll counterfet a clarke He wolde trotte gentylly but he is to starke. 1542 A. Borde Compend. Regyment Helth viii. sig. D.iv I do aduertyse you not to..syt by the fyre..for fyre..doth make sterke the synewes & ioyntes of man. 1590 E. Spenser Faerie Queene i. i. sig. B And downe did lay His heauie head,..Whose sences all were straight benumbd and starke. 1607 E. Topsell Hist. Foure-footed Beastes 402 [The Mallander] will make a horse go stark, & stumble much. 1646 H. More Cupids Confl. 13 in Democritus Platonissans The clearest truths may well seem dark When sloathfull men have eyes so dimme and stark. 1660 F. Brooke tr. V. Le Blanc World Surveyed 334 We had not strength to make another [bridge of planks] we were so num'd and stark [printed strark], with the cold. 1753 T. Richards Antiquæ Linguæ Britannicæ Thes. Sythu, to grow stark or stiff with cold. 1817 P. B. Shelley Laon & Cythna iii. xviii. 66 I sought to close mine eyes, But like the balls, their lids were stiff and stark. 1840 R. H. Barham Hand of Glory in Ingoldsby Legends 1st Ser. 47 But, ere he can vent one inquisitive sniff, That little pug-dog stands stark and stiff. 1886 R. E. G. Cole Gloss. Words S.-W. Lincs. (at cited word) The rheumatis' has left my leg a bit stark. 1944 W. de la Mare Coll. Rhymes & Verses 85 She stoops and listens Stark with fear. 1986 D. Adams et al. Utterly Merry Comic Relief Christmas Bk. 111/1 Her bosom heaved and her face was stark with fright. 2005 P. Gregory Constant Princess 245 The ambassador nodded; her face was so stark and shocked that he could hardly find his voice. b. Rigid or stiff in death; characterized by rigor mortis.Cf. slightly earlier stark dead adj., and note at sense B. 2. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > dead body > [adjective] > condition of stiffa1200 colda1400 throa1400 starkc1425 clay-cold1633 stith1755 c1425 J. Lydgate Troyyes Bk. (Augustus A.iv) iv. l. 1526 Achilles toke of hym noon hede..to Heber þat lay aforn hym ded, Ful colde and starke. ?1572 T. Paynell tr. Treasurie Amadis of Fraunce x. 263 Solemne teares were shedde vpon the two Princes that laye starke and styffe. 1599 W. Shakespeare Romeo & Juliet iv. i. 103 Each part depriu'd of supple gouernment, Shall stiffe and starke, and cold appeare like death. View more context for this quotation 1609 P. Holland tr. Ammianus Marcellinus Rom. Hist. 136 The bodies of the Persians slaine, waxe drie and starke as stakes. a1616 W. Shakespeare Cymbeline (1623) iv. ii. 210 [Stage direct. Enter Aruiragus, with Imogen dead.] Bel. How found you him? Arui. Starke, as you see. View more context for this quotation 1762 J. Hoadly Lillo's Arden of Feversham v. 61 The prints of several feet may in the snow be trac'd, From the stark body to the very door. 1841 H. W. Longfellow Wreck of Hesperus in Boston Bk. (ed. 3) 76 A frozen corpse was he. Lash'd to the helm all stiff and stark. 1866 C. Kingsley Hereward the Wake I. vi. 184 They had left nought between the Scheldt and the Somme save stark corpses. 1923 Bismarck (N. Dakota) Tribune 18 Oct. 8/1 Whether the rescuers will be greeted by trembling miners or stark bodies is a matter of conjecture. 1956 J. L. Rutledge Cent. of Confl. xi. 196 There were no defenders, unless it was the stark bodies of two dead French prisoners left behind by the retreating Indians. 2001 Gaston (Gastonia, N. Carolina) Gaz. 18 Feb. h3/3 Later that same evening Major David Wilson..recovered the stark corpse. 2007 S. Blackhall Quarry iv. 47 Miss Vining lay sterk on the bed, her een fixed wide in fricht. 6. a. Sheer, absolute, unqualified; complete, out-and-out, utter. Cf. sense B. 2. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > [adjective] > utter or absolute shirea1225 purec1300 properc1380 plainc1395 cleana1400 fine?a1400 entirec1400 veryc1400 starka1425 utterc1430 utterlyc1440 merec1443 absolute1531 outright1532 cleara1535 bloodyc1540 unproachable1544 flat1553 downright1577 sheer1583 right-down?1586 single1590 peremptory1601 perfecta1616 downa1625 implicit1625 every way1628 blank1637 out-and-outa1642 errant1644 inaccessional1651 thorough-paced1651 even down1654 dead1660 double-dyed1667 through stitch1681 through-stitched1682 total1702 thoroughgoing1719 thorough-sped1730 regular1740 plumb1748 hollow1751 unextenuated1765 unmitigated1783 stick, stock, stone dead1796 positive1802 rank1809 heart-whole1823 skire1825 solid1830 fair1835 teetotal1840 bodacious1845 raw1856 literal1857 resounding1873 roaring1884 all out1893 fucking1893 pink1896 twenty-four carat1900 grand slam1915 stone1928 diabolical1933 fricking1937 righteous1940 fecking1952 raving1954 a1425 (?a1400) G. Chaucer Romaunt Rose (Hunterian) (1891) l. 7290 Bvt vnto you dar I not lye But myght I felen..That ye perceyued it no thyng Ye shulde haue a stark lesyng Right in youre honde. c1450 (c1415) in W. O. Ross Middle Eng. Serm. (1940) 210 (MED) Þat [restitution] þei will not do, for þan þei shuld make here wiff and here children starke beggers. ?1529 Proper Dyaloge Gentillman & Husbandman sig. B iiij By saynt mary syr that is a starcke lye. a1556 N. Udall Ralph Roister Doister (?1566) i. iii. sig. B.ijv But it will be starke nyght before I shall haue done. 1594 R. Carew tr. J. Huarte Exam. Mens Wits xv. §4. 309 The whole..is in my conceit a starcke leasing, and very mockerie. 1611 B. Jonson Catiline i. sig. C3 Consider, first, the starke security The common wealth is in, now. View more context for this quotation a1661 B. Holyday tr. Juvenal Satyres (1673) 182 To escape starke beggery. 1701 J. Collier tr. M. Aurelius Medit. (1726) 292 Let all this be done out of stark love and kindness. 1791 J. Boswell Life Johnson anno 1728 I. 25 Boswell: ‘That, Sir, was great fortitude of mind.’ Johnson: ‘No, Sir; stark insensibility.’ 1820 P. B. Shelley Vision of Sea in Prometheus Unbound 174 From the stark night of vapours the dim rain is driven. 1852 H. Rogers Eclipse of Faith 373 [They were convinced] that the only orthodox belief in such a world was stark Atheism. 1898 F. T. Bullen Cruise ‘Cachalot’ xxv. 333 When a stark calm left the surface of the bay as smooth as a river. 1973 N. Monsarrat Kappillan of Malta 134 Father Salvatore..running for shelter as soon as the ferocious uproar began, experienced his first moment of stark terror. 2015 Cape Argus (Nexis) 12 Mar. 13 We live in a depressingly binary world where everything, in so many ways, is either stark black or crisp white. b. spec. Qualifying an unfavourable appellation of a person: arrant, thorough, unmitigated. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > [adjective] > utter or absolute > of something bad or reprobated > of a person arrant1393 errant1393 starka1470 unconscionable1591 omnipotent1596 incarnative1598 run devil1786 incarnate1820 blithering1889 a1470 T. Malory Morte Darthur (Winch. Coll. 13) (1990) I. 161 Be a knyght never so good..they woll make hym a starke cowerde. c1480 (a1400) St. John Evangelist 401 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) I. 120 He lefit þe bischope, & vent þan to sterk thefis. 1530 J. Rastell New Bk. Purgatory iii. xv. sig. h 4v He shall be proued a very stark fole that wyll beleue that there is no purgatory. 1545 R. Ascham Toxophilus i. f. 44 Yet if he giue it ouer, and not vse to shote..he shalbe come of a fayre archer, a stark squyrter and dribber. 1614 in J. R. N. Macphail Highland Papers (1920) III. 172 Ane stark theiff and captane of theifis. 1652 R. Brome Joviall Crew ii. sig. E1 I mean stark, errant, downright Beggars, I, Without equivocation; Statute Beggars. a1711 T. Ken Serm. preached at Whitehall in Prose Wks. (1838) 123 Beauty is often incident to stark fools. 1750 S. Berington Dialogue between Gallows & Free Thinker (ed. 3) 20 That Man would be a stark Fool, who should trust his Life and Fortune to your Honour, when you laugh at the very fundamental Laws of Nature. 1817 P. B. Shelley Laon & Cythna xi. xii. 243 'Tis but a crowd of maniacs stark. 1877 T. De W. Talmage Serm. 260 Before we make stark fools of ourselves, let us stop pressing this everlasting ‘Why’. 1924 Iola (Kansas) Daily Reg. 4 Aug. 4/2 Such persons are just as incapable of any qualms of conscience as a stark idiot is incapable of any processes of logic or reason. 1991 Vancouver Sun (Nexis) 7 Sept. b4 If all this, Liberal and Conservative, seems rather like a tale told by a caucus of stark idiots, there was a certain logic to it. 2011 W. N. Akombi Dirty Game iv. 26 Advising such stark nincompoops is like injecting a death body for recovery. 7. = stark naked adj. 1 Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > wearing clothing > nakedness or state of being unclothed > [adjective] nakedOE bareOE start nakedc1225 nakec1300 unarrayedc1380 clothelessc1386 mother-nakedc1390 stark nakedc1390 bareda1400 naked as a needlec1400 unattiredc1400 uncladc1400 uncoveredc1400 loose1423 unclothedc1440 belly-nakeda1500 naked as one's nail1563 unabuilyeit1568 sindonlessc1595 leathern1596 disarrayed1611 undressed1613 debaredc1620 unapparelled1622 unaccoutred?1750 stark1762 disrobed1794 ungarmented1798 undraped1814 au naturel1828 nude1830 skyclad1832 garbless1838 kitless1846 spar-naked1849 raimentless1852 undoffed1854 togless1857 garmentless1866 naked as a robin1866 clothesless1868 sky clothed1878 nakedized1885 altogether1896 buck naked1913 raw1916 bollock naked1922 starkers1923 starko1923 stitchless1927 naked as a jaybird1931 bollock1950 rollock naked1962 nekkid1977 kit-off1992 1762 H. Walpole Let. 15 Mar. in Corr. (1974) XXXVIII. 155 What dreadful discoveries will be made both on fat and lean! I recommend to you the idea of Mrs Cavendish, when half-stark. 1817 P. B. Shelley Laon & Cythna iii. xiii. 63 They bore me to a cavern..And one did strip me stark. 1885 R. Bridges Eros & Psyche i. xxx. 12 Behind came Tritons..Greenbearded, tailed like fish, all sleek and stark. 1898 J. Buchan John Burnet of Barns iii. vii. 255 Slowly..they began to disrobe themselves..till they stood before me..as stark as the day they were born. 1922 W. J. Locke Tale of Triona v. 64 Before her eyes swayed..various forms all stark flesh, flashing jewels and a maze of colours, whom she knew to be women. 1963 J. Fowles Collector i. 10 Books you can buy at shops in Soho, books of stark women and all that. 8. a. Characterized by or indicating an unpleasant truth or grim reality; difficult or impossible to ignore or deny; brutally clear. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > adversity > calamity or misfortune > [adjective] > inauspicious > of aspect threatening misfortune ominousa1593 sinister1797 stark1847 grim1873 1847 Belfast News Let. 9 Nov. Mr. Salt drew a picture of the stark reality, which strangely contrasts with Lord John's cheerful vaticinations. 1927 Amer. Mercury Jan. 124/1 Falsity persuasively presented often..makes a deeper impression and registers a deeper conviction than stark reality not trickily theatricalized. 1959 R. V. Remini W. Van Buren & Making of Democratic Party ii. 12 The charred remains left by the ‘arsonist’ British..served as stark reminders of the price of liberty and the penalty of war. 1970 Daily Herald (Biloxi, Mississippi) 16 Aug. g2/4 At that moment, with the stark realization that those left must fight back, the recovery began. 1998 Earth Matters Autumn 24/1 Governments will then face a stark choice: either sign away the rights of their citizens, or be starved of investment and face economic stagnation if they stay on the outside. 2011 Guardian (Nexis) 5 Mar. 24 There are no conditions too rough, or warnings too stark, to preclude a night working for money to buy the drugs on which they depend. b. Of a plan, method, approach, etc.: inflexible, rigid, admitting of no compromise or alternative.In origin largely a figurative use of sense A. 4. ΚΠ 1850 R. W. Emerson Montaigne in Representative Men iv. 160 The Spartan and Stoic schemes are too stark and stiff for our occasion. 1852 W. E. Gladstone Functions of Laymen in Church 26 We seem to require an elasticity of system..which is in entire contrast with our rather stark and rigid methods. 1886 F. Harrison Choice Bks. 53 There is much in the method and genius of the French drama which falls chill and stark on ears accustomed to the abounding life of a Shakspearean play. 1925 C. E. Vaughan Stud. Hist. Polit. Philos. I. v. 261 To Helvétius, Bentham and others, expediency, so far from being a flexible principle, is in effect hardly less stark and rigid than the rival principle of Rights. 1956 G. S. N. Luckyj Lit. Politics in Soviet Ukraine, 1917–34 (1990) vii. 156 The general atmosphere of Ukrainian literary life in 1930 became increasingly tense and demands upon literature grew more stark and inflexible. 2003 Daily Mail (Nexis) 1 July 30 Their counsel Robin Tolson QC described the law as too stark, too rigid and too inflexible. c. Of a contrast, disparity, etc.: strong, striking; plainly or sharply differentiated. ΚΠ 1867 Illustr. London News 16 Feb. 170/3 Of the Italian and Algerian subjects by Mr. Binyon, one at least has the opposite fault of stark contrasts of light and shade. 1929 L. A. G. Strong Dewer Rides ii. xi. 171 Next, a burst of human voices, their harsh inadequacy in stark contrast to the bells. 1931 Times 15 Aug. 6/1 There is a stark contradiction between the spirit of service and the practice of overstatement. 1972 R. T. Denommé French Parnassian Poets iv. 94 The stark juxtaposition of scenes which alternatively evoke life and death endows the poem with a certain tragic and epic sense. 1990 Entertainm. Weekly 20 Apr. 56/3 The precisely etched warmth of the strings sets her voice in stark relief. 2010 S. Wolf Changed for Good iv. 155 The gendered difference is stark: the man controls the boat and so appears active, while the woman sits still. d. Unadorned, shorn of ornament or detail; exposed, stripped down to essentials.In origin largely a figurative use of sense A. 7. ΚΠ 1871 M. Arnold Lit. & Dogma in Cornhill Mag. July 44 If all the law they were thinking of stood stark and fixed before their eyes already. 1891 T. Hardy Tess of the D'Urbervilles I. v. 69 He felt the necessity of recommencing with a name..less commonplace than the two original bald stark words. 1915 D. H. Lawrence Rainbow (1972) vii. 205 Soon he would be stark, stark, without one place wherein to stand, without one belief in which to rest. 1931 State Center (Iowa) Enterprise 29 Oct. 2/3 That wealth evaporates and leaves men stark and with naked hearts. 1956 Times Lit. Suppl. 17 Feb. 93/1 Idyllic romanticism, stark realism and astringent irony combine..to form a bewildering whole. 1981 A. Gray Lanark iii. v. 36 Her austere manner and clothing had made Lanark expect a stark room. 1989 R. Rendell Bridesmaid vi. 92 There were people like that, people for whom the truth was too stark and bare, who needed to pretty it up. 2006 New Yorker 13 Feb. 175/2 The writing and the directing are stripped down and stark, as is the concrete-and-glass interior of C.T.U. B. adv. 1. Strenuously, vigorously, hard; boldly, stoutly; firmly, strongly; (in later use) plainly, bluntly. Now rare (chiefly Scottish in later use). ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > manner of action > vigour or energy > [adverb] hardlyeOE strongeOE hardOE fastOE starklyOE stalworthlyc1175 starkc1225 mainlyc1300 fellc1330 snellc1330 stout1338 wightlya1340 sadlya1375 sharplyc1380 tough1398 stoutly1399 throa1400 wighta1400 lustilyc1400 sorec1400 vigourslyc1400 stiff1422 vigoriouslya1450 vigorouslya1450 actuallya1470 stourlyc1480 forcely?a1500 lustly1529 fricklyc1540 dingilya1555 livelily?1565 crankly1566 forcibly1578 crank1579 wightily?a1600 proudly1600 energetically1609 stiffly1623 ding-dong1628 greenly1633 hard and fast1646 slashingly1659 thwackingly1660 warmlya1684 robustly1709 sonsily1729 forcefullya1774 vim1843 zippily1924 vibrantly1926 punchily1934 zingily1951 c1225 (?c1200) St. Katherine (Royal) (1981) l. 891 Te irnene preones swa scharpe & swa starke borien þurh ant beoren forð on þet oðer half þet te hweoles beon þurh-spitet. c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) l. 8326 Samuel nom Agag..& lædde hine a þan cheping. & lette hine swiðe sterke [c1300 Otho faste] to ane stake binde. a1513 J. Irland Meroure of Wyssdome (1965) II. 5 The beir has sa stark feit that the thing that he grippis he haldis sa stark. a1600 ( W. Stewart tr. H. Boece Bk. Cron. Scotl. (1858) II. 673 The wind it blew so stark out of the south,..it draif thame to the north. 1794 Har'st Rig lxxv. 25 Now kempen folk, they dinae lo'e They work sae stark. 1893 G. MacDonald Sc. Songs & Ballads 127 The auld fowk lie still wi' their een starin stark. 1900 C. Lee Cynthia in West v. 82 One young chap asked a maid the question, and she said ‘no’, and said it brave and stark. 1990 J. Reid in J. A. Begg & J. Reid Dipper & Three Wee Deils (SCOTS) He..Caas oot the men an tells them stark Bauld Pharoah's plan for increased wark. 2. To the fullest extent or degree; absolutely, utterly, completely. Cf. sense A. 6. a. Modifying an adjective, esp. in stark mad; also (Nautical) stark calm. See also stark blind adj., stark dead adj., stark naked adj. and n., stark naught adj. and n.Recorded earliest in stark dead adj. and stark naked adj. (in origin an alteration of start naked adj.), and slightly later also in stark blind adj. (probably in origin an alteration of star-blind adj.1). In stark dead adj., stark perhaps originally had connotations of sense A. 5.The adverb is often hyphenated with the following adjective, esp. when used attributively. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > [adverb] > utterly allOE allOE outlyOE thwert-outc1175 skerea1225 thoroughc1225 downrightc1275 purec1300 purelyc1300 faira1325 finelyc1330 quitec1330 quitelyc1330 utterlyc1374 outerlya1382 plainlya1382 straighta1387 allutterly1389 starkc1390 oultrelya1393 plata1393 barec1400 outrightc1400 incomparablyc1422 absolutely?a1425 simpliciter?a1425 staringa1425 quitementa1450 properlyc1450 directly1455 merec1475 incomparable1482 preciselyc1503 clean?1515 cleara1522 plain1535 merely1546 stark1553 perfectly1555 right-down1566 simply1574 flat1577 flatly1577 skire1581 plumb1588 dead?1589 rankly1590 stark1593 sheera1600 start1599 handsmooth1600 peremptory1601 sheerly1601 rank1602 utter1619 point-blank1624 proofa1625 peremptorily1626 downrightly1632 right-down1646 solid1651 clever1664 just1668 hollow1671 entirely1673 blank1677 even down1677 cleverly1696 uncomparatively1702 subtly1733 point1762 cussed1779 regularly1789 unqualifiedly1789 irredeemably1790 positively1800 cussedly1802 heart1812 proper1816 slick1818 blankly1822 bang1828 smack1828 pluperfectly1831 unmitigatedly1832 bodaciously1833 unredeemedly1835 out of sight1839 bodacious1845 regular1846 thoroughly1846 ingrainedly1869 muckinga1880 fucking1893 motherless1898 self1907 stone1928 sideways1956 terminally1974 c1390 (?c1350) Joseph of Arimathie (1871) l. 567 [He] Baar him doun of his hors and..strok him stark ded þat he sturede neuere. c1489 J. Skelton Dethe Erle of Northumberlande l. 50 in Poet. Wks. (1843) I. 8 I say, ye comoners, why wer ye so stark mad? 1561 J. Daus tr. H. Bullinger Hundred Serm. vpon Apocalips xli. 274 Our religion is true, and yours starke false. 1579 T. North tr. Plutarch Liues 63 They forced them sometimes to drincke wine..till they had made them starke drunke. 1593 G. Harvey Pierces Supererogation 150 Iwis hee mought haue spied a difference..betwene raging, and starke-madd. c1595 Capt. Wyatt in G. F. Warner Voy. R. Dudley to W. Indies (1899) 52 Havinge somtimes most soden gustes and againe in a moment beinge starke becalmed. a1616 W. Shakespeare Taming of Shrew (1623) iii. ii. 53 His horse..starke spoyl'd with the Staggers. View more context for this quotation 1624 J. Smith Gen. Hist. Virginia v. 182 In the evening it grew starke calme. 1661 S. Pepys Diary 23 Apr. (1970) II. 87 We drank the King's health..till one of the genlemen fell down stark drunk and there lay. 1719 D. Defoe Life Robinson Crusoe 21 Going a fishing in a stark calm Morning. a1721 M. Prior Cromwell & Porter in Wks. (1907) II. 281 You may study among the Law givers without being stark wild about Ordinances and Proclamations. 1764 Dialogue containing Refl. 3 Puh! Puh! Puh! Mad indeed! Quite mad! Stark mad! What in the name of the D—l have we to do with Cato's, Sempronies's, or Syphax's. 1818 W. Scott Heart of Mid-Lothian v, in Tales of my Landlord 2nd Ser. I. 130 But every body was, for the moment, stark-mad on the subject of Porteous. 1823 W. Scoresby Jrnl. Voy. Northern Whale-fishery 390 It fell stark calm. 1870 W. Morris Earthly Paradise: Pt. III 45 And, stark awake, with beating heart He put the hawthorn twigs apart. 1927 Albuquerque (New Mexico) Jrnl. 23 June 2/4 Ward's finish at the eighteenth hole, which denoted the exit of the champion, drove the gallery stark wild. 1988 A. Tyler Breathing Lessons (1989) ii. 139 The car is setting stark still. 2011 Wales on Sunday (Nexis) 30 Oct. 16 Just because a woman looks as though she shares her home with loads of cats, it doesn't necessarily mean she's stark mad. b. Modifying a participial adjective, esp. staring, raving. Now usually in stark raving (also staring) mad. Also stark ravers (slang): see ravers adj.In later use the collocation stark staring is often felt as a mere strengthening of stark. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > mental health > mental illness > [adjective] > insanity or madness > affected with woodc725 woodsekc890 giddyc1000 out of (by, from, of) wit or one's witc1000 witlessc1000 brainsickOE amadc1225 lunaticc1290 madc1330 sickc1340 brain-wooda1375 out of one's minda1387 frenetica1398 fonda1400 formada1400 unwisea1400 brainc1400 unwholec1400 alienate?a1425 brainless1434 distract of one's wits1470 madfula1475 furious1475 distract1481 fro oneself1483 beside oneself1490 beside one's patience1490 dementa1500 red-wood?1507 extraught1509 misminded1509 peevish1523 bedlam-ripe1525 straughta1529 fanatic1533 bedlama1535 daft1540 unsounda1547 stark raving (also staring) mad1548 distraughted1572 insane1575 acrazeda1577 past oneself1576 frenzy1577 poll-mad1577 out of one's senses1580 maddeda1586 frenetical1588 distempered1593 distraught1597 crazed1599 diswitted1599 idle-headed1599 lymphatical1603 extract1608 madling1608 distracteda1616 informala1616 far gone1616 crazy1617 March mada1625 non compos mentis1628 brain-crazed1632 demented1632 crack-brained1634 arreptitiousa1641 dementate1640 dementated1650 brain-crackeda1652 insaniated1652 exsensed1654 bedlam-witteda1657 lymphatic1656 mad-like1679 dementative1685 non compos1699 beside one's gravity1716 hyte1720 lymphated1727 out of one's head1733 maddened1735 swivel-eyed1758 wrong1765 brainsickly1770 fatuous1773 derangedc1790 alienated1793 shake-brained1793 crack-headed1796 flighty1802 wowf1802 doitrified1808 phrenesiac1814 bedlamite1815 mad-braineda1822 fey1823 bedlamitish1824 skire1825 beside one's wits1827 as mad as a hatter1829 crazied1842 off one's head1842 bemadded1850 loco1852 off one's nut1858 off his chump1864 unsane1867 meshuga1868 non-sane1868 loony1872 bee-headed1879 off one's onion1881 off one's base1882 (to go) off one's dot1883 locoed1885 screwy1887 off one's rocker1890 balmy or barmy on (or in) the crumpet1891 meshuggener1892 nutty1892 buggy1893 bughouse1894 off one's pannikin1894 ratty1895 off one's trolley1896 batchy1898 twisted1900 batsc1901 batty1903 dippy1903 bugs1904 dingy1904 up the (also a) pole1904 nut1906 nuts1908 nutty as a fruitcake1911 bugged1920 potty1920 cuckoo1923 nutsy1923 puggled1923 blah1924 détraqué1925 doolally1925 off one's rocket1925 puggle1925 mental1927 phooey1927 crackers1928 squirrelly1928 over the edge1929 round the bend1929 lakes1934 ding-a-ling1935 wacky1935 screwball1936 dingbats1937 Asiatic1938 parlatic1941 troppo1941 up the creek1941 screwed-up1943 bonkers1945 psychological1952 out to lunch1955 starkers1956 off (one's) squiff1960 round the twist1960 yampy1963 out of (also off) one's bird1966 out of one's skull1967 whacked out1969 batshit1971 woo-woo1971 nutso1973 out of (one's) gourd1977 wacko1977 off one's meds1986 1548 N. Udall et al. tr. Erasmus Paraphr. Newe Test. I. Luke vi. f. 6–11 Thei are turned into stercke staryng madnesse [L. in amentiam]. c1555 Manifest Detection Diceplay sig. Aviii R. Euery Player..payeth a Crowne..towards the house charges. M. Ye may fare well of that price at the starke staring stewes. 1562 J. Heywood Firste Hundred Epigrammes (new ed.) lxix. in Wks. sig. P I thinke it as good, by ought I can deuise, To be starke staryng blinde, as thus to haue eies. 1575 G. Gascoigne Fruites of Warre cvii, in Posies sig. Iiiiiv The tide skarce good, the winde starke staring naught. 1640 J. D. Knave in Graine v. i. sig. L3 Did not I say he's mad, starke raving mad, away with him. 1695 J. Dryden in tr. C. A. du Fresnoy Art of Painting Pref. p. xl The fury of his natural temper, made every Man and Woman too in his Plays stark raging mad. 1702 C. Beaumont J. Beaumont's Psyche (new ed.) xii. xxxii. 183 Stark raving she and roaring prov'd. 1734 H. Fielding Intrig. Chambermaid ii. vi. 33 I find, I am distracted, I am stark raving mad. 1788 J. Wesley Serm. Several Occasions VI. 22 It is such stark-staring nonsense, as every man of sense ought to be utterly ashamed of. 1833 T. Hood Lost Heir in Mirror Lit., Amusem., & Instr. Suppl. No. 637. 390/1 Oh Lord! O dear, my heart will break, I shall go stick stark staring wild! 1850 G. Cupples Green Hand iv. 39/1 One morning, when Westwood and I went on deck, it was a stark staring calm. 1894 Mrs. H. Ward Marcella II. iii. i. 263 The whole thing is stark staring lunacy. 1929 K. Millay Against Wall 428 I'm going to get out of here before I'm stark staring mad like all the rest of you—stark—staring—mad! Mad! 1958 E. Dundy Dud Avocado iii. vi. 270 My first thought was that I had gone stark raving mad..and that I was now hallucinating in a looney bin. 1987 Sydney Morning Herald (Nexis) 13 July 14 Australia and its ASEAN neighbours would be stark-staring mad not to push the Americans and Russians for nuclear-free zones at every opportunity. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > [adverb] > utterly allOE allOE outlyOE thwert-outc1175 skerea1225 thoroughc1225 downrightc1275 purec1300 purelyc1300 faira1325 finelyc1330 quitec1330 quitelyc1330 utterlyc1374 outerlya1382 plainlya1382 straighta1387 allutterly1389 starkc1390 oultrelya1393 plata1393 barec1400 outrightc1400 incomparablyc1422 absolutely?a1425 simpliciter?a1425 staringa1425 quitementa1450 properlyc1450 directly1455 merec1475 incomparable1482 preciselyc1503 clean?1515 cleara1522 plain1535 merely1546 stark1553 perfectly1555 right-down1566 simply1574 flat1577 flatly1577 skire1581 plumb1588 dead?1589 rankly1590 stark1593 sheera1600 start1599 handsmooth1600 peremptory1601 sheerly1601 rank1602 utter1619 point-blank1624 proofa1625 peremptorily1626 downrightly1632 right-down1646 solid1651 clever1664 just1668 hollow1671 entirely1673 blank1677 even down1677 cleverly1696 uncomparatively1702 subtly1733 point1762 cussed1779 regularly1789 unqualifiedly1789 irredeemably1790 positively1800 cussedly1802 heart1812 proper1816 slick1818 blankly1822 bang1828 smack1828 pluperfectly1831 unmitigatedly1832 bodaciously1833 unredeemedly1835 out of sight1839 bodacious1845 regular1846 thoroughly1846 ingrainedly1869 muckinga1880 fucking1893 motherless1898 self1907 stone1928 sideways1956 terminally1974 1553 T. Wilson Arte of Rhetorique 75 Antisthenes made suche a long oracion, that he starke weried all his hearers. a1661 B. Holyday tr. Juvenal Satyres (1673) 146 Whiles he strives to perfect the boy, he starke tires himself. d. Modifying an adverb or adverbial phrase. Now esp. in stark out of one's mind. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > greatness of quantity, amount, or degree > high or intense degree > [adverb] > utterly allOE allOE outlyOE thwert-outc1175 skerea1225 thoroughc1225 downrightc1275 purec1300 purelyc1300 faira1325 finelyc1330 quitec1330 quitelyc1330 utterlyc1374 outerlya1382 plainlya1382 straighta1387 allutterly1389 starkc1390 oultrelya1393 plata1393 barec1400 outrightc1400 incomparablyc1422 absolutely?a1425 simpliciter?a1425 staringa1425 quitementa1450 properlyc1450 directly1455 merec1475 incomparable1482 preciselyc1503 clean?1515 cleara1522 plain1535 merely1546 stark1553 perfectly1555 right-down1566 simply1574 flat1577 flatly1577 skire1581 plumb1588 dead?1589 rankly1590 stark1593 sheera1600 start1599 handsmooth1600 peremptory1601 sheerly1601 rank1602 utter1619 point-blank1624 proofa1625 peremptorily1626 downrightly1632 right-down1646 solid1651 clever1664 just1668 hollow1671 entirely1673 blank1677 even down1677 cleverly1696 uncomparatively1702 subtly1733 point1762 cussed1779 regularly1789 unqualifiedly1789 irredeemably1790 positively1800 cussedly1802 heart1812 proper1816 slick1818 blankly1822 bang1828 smack1828 pluperfectly1831 unmitigatedly1832 bodaciously1833 unredeemedly1835 out of sight1839 bodacious1845 regular1846 thoroughly1846 ingrainedly1869 muckinga1880 fucking1893 motherless1898 self1907 stone1928 sideways1956 terminally1974 1593 J. Eliot Ortho-epia Gallica ii. vi. 45/2 Mad is the man, and starke out of his wit: Who drinks carrouse, and laugheth not a whit. 1668 T. Shadwell Sullen Lovers ii. 17 O' my Conscience thou art stark out of thy Wits. 1863 A. W. Kinglake Invasion of Crimea II. 307 No other light infantry men were thrown forward in their stead, and the whole body went stark on with bare front. 1899 ‘Zack’ On Trial xvii. 148 I've half a mind to turn him stark out o' the house. 1939 L. Hellman Little Foxes i. 3 You gone stark out of your head? 1960 Lowell (Mass.) Sun 8 Mar. 5/5 His buddy asked if he'd gone stark out of his mind. 2011 P. C. Wrede Across Great Barrier iv. 46 Three men so stark out of their minds that some folks still said they'd made up their whole story. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2016; most recently modified version published online June 2022). starkv. Now rare (chiefly regional in later use). 1. a. intransitive. To become stiff or rigid. Also: (of liquid) to coagulate, solidify. Now Irish English (northern). ΘΚΠ the world > matter > constitution of matter > density or solidity > become (more) dense or solid [verb (intransitive)] thicka1000 starkOE congealc1400 starken?a1513 concrease1578 thicken1598 knit1605 condensate1607 fix1626 saddena1642 concretea1676 incrassate1733 solidify1837 consolidate1885 the world > matter > constitution of matter > hardness > types of hardness > [verb (intransitive)] > become stiff or rigid starkOE starken?a1513 rigidify1829 rigidize1858 OE Prudentius Glosses (Boulogne 189) in H. D. Meritt Old Eng. Prudentius Glosses (1959) 108 Riget : durescit, stearcode. a1325 Gloss. W. de Bibbesworth (Arun.) (1857) 149 Les nerfs de bewor engurdisst [glossed] starken [a1325 Cambr. swellin]. a1400 in F. J. Furnivall Polit., Relig., & Love Poems (1903) 250 (MED) Þin hew dunnet and þi sennewess starket. c1475 (a1449) J. Lydgate Testament (Harl. 218) l. 244 in Minor Poems (1911) i. 244 (MED) The onweldy Ioyntes starked with rudenesse..To me of death han brought in the kalendes. ?1527 Iudycyall of Vryns ii. vi. 27 It causeth rigor Anglice starkyng and racchyng for colde. 1615 J. Sylvester Hymn of Almes 50 in 2nd Session Parl. Vertues Reall To stark for Cold, to starue for Food. 1996 C. I. Macafee Conc. Ulster Dict. 332/1 Stark, starken, (of fat, etc.) congeal, harden. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > constitution of matter > hardness > types of hardness > [verb (transitive)] > make stiff or rigid stivea1375 stiff1486 stent1488 stiffen1622 rigidify1842 stark1862 rigidize1936 1862 H. Taylor St. Clement's Eve v. v. 179 Arise, if horror have not stark'd your limbs. 1922 Illustr. Canad. Forestry Mag. Dec. 1182/3 At the first shock we shall be starked and gaped with horror; upon meditation we shall be bowed down with shame. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > bodily constitution > bodily strength > strengthening > make strong [verb (transitive)] strengha1175 strengthc1300 fastena1398 starka1400 fortify14.. enstrength1483 roborate1534 enstrengthen1539 strengthen1539 strengthen1546 masculate1623 nerve1694 nervate1792 a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 1845 Þe stormes starked wit þe wind. 1488 (c1478) Hary Actis & Deidis Schir William Wallace (Adv.) (1968–9) xii. l. 892 And Iohn Wallang, was than schirreff off Fyff, Till Wallace past, starkyt him in that stryff. 1562 W. Turner Bk. Natures Bathes Eng. f. 8, in 2nd Pt. Herball This bath..sterketh and streingtheneth verye muche the broken place. ΚΠ 1838 W. Holloway Gen. Dict. Provincialisms 162/2 Ground is said to be very stark, or starked up, when the surface has been dried very suddenly after rain. Sussex. Hants. 1893 G. E. Dartnell & E. H. Goddard Gloss. Words Wilts. 156 The ground is got so stark—you see the hot sun after the rain did stark the top on't. Derivatives starked adj. rare stiffened, stiff. ΘΚΠ the world > matter > constitution of matter > hardness > [adjective] > hardened yharded1297 hardeneda1425 hardedc1425 starkeda1500 enharded1523 indurate1531 stonied1590 over-hardened1612 obdured1619 immarbled1641 stockfished1654 obdurate1743 hard-set?1781 a1500 (?c1440) J. Lydgate Horse, Goose & Sheep (Lansd.) l. 388 in Minor Poems (1934) ii. 555 It..Causith men starkid bonys to recure; Dede synnewis restorith a-geyn to live. 1847 Farmer's Mag. July 205/2 The lambs get starked and look rough in their skins unless some good dry food is also used. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2016; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.21541n.31611n.41914adj.n.1adv.eOEv.OE |
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