sheer, utter, downright, or complete: stark madness.
harsh, grim, or desolate, as a view, place, etc.: a stark landscape.
extremely simple or severe: a stark interior.
bluntly or sternly plain; not softened or glamorized: the stark reality of the schedule's deadline.
stiff or rigid in substance, muscles, etc.
rigid in death.
Archaic. strong; powerful; massive or robust.
adverb
utterly, absolutely, or quite: stark mad.
Chiefly Scot.and North England. in a stark manner; stoutly or vigorously.
Origin of stark
before 900; (adj.) Middle English; Old English stearc stiff, firm; cognate with German stark strong; akin to Old Norse sterkr strong; akin to starch, stare; (adv.) Middle English sterke, derivative of the adj.
synonym study for stark
2, 3. See austere, bare1.
OTHER WORDS FROM stark
starkly,adverbstarkness,noun
Words nearby stark
starfucker, stargaze, stargazer, star grass, star jasmine, stark, Stark effect, Starker, starkers, star key, stark-naked
Definition for stark (2 of 2)
Stark
[ stahrk; for 2 alsoGerman shtahrk ]
/ stɑrk; for 2 alsoGerman ʃtɑrk /
noun
Harold Rayns·ford[reynz-ferd], /ˈreɪnz fərd/, 1880–1972, U.S. admiral.
Jo·han·nes[yoh-hah-nuhs], /yoʊˈhɑ nəs/, 1874–1957, German physicist: Nobel prize 1919.
John, 1728–1822, American Revolutionary War general.
As such, the stark reality for early-stage startups is they may yet be caught in the cross-hairs of tough macroeconomic headwinds that are forcing even far more established startups to layoff staff and cut down costs.
Venture capital firms are collaborating to keep Nigerian startups alive|Yomi Kazeem|September 2, 2020|Quartz
This hopeful message stood in stark contrast to his tough, no-nonsense, frontal attack on the president.
Joe Biden Appealed To 2 Different Audiences In His Acceptance Speech – 2 Experts Discuss Which Punches Landed|LGBTQ-Editor|August 22, 2020|No Straight News
My guess is that while we wait for a vaccine or treatment, the international contrasts will only grow more stark.
A world divided into “cans” and “cannots”|Katie McLean|August 19, 2020|MIT Technology Review
The city conducted a survey to get a better sense of who’s offering the advice and found a stark demographic disparity.
Morning Report: MTS Doled Out Violations Disproportionately|Voice of San Diego|July 27, 2020|Voice of San Diego
In stark contrast to the rest of the US, where the number of positive coronavirus cases are spiking, reports indicate that New York is effectively containing the coronavirus, at least for the time being.
The shrewd political craft behind Andrew Cuomo’s folksy pandemic poster|Anne Quito|July 15, 2020|Quartz
His constant worship of his wife stands in stark contrast to scandals of the domestic nature in other sports.
The Story of the World’s Greatest Cricket Player|William O’Connor|December 24, 2014|DAILY BEAST
These images, videos and messages became a lifeline between two worlds and a stark record of the distance between them.
War Is About More Than Heroes, Martyrs, and Patriots|Nathan Bradley Bethea|November 12, 2014|DAILY BEAST
The fun of the episode, however, stands in stark contrast to its conclusion.
The Walking Dead’s ‘Self Help’: A Grim Show Displays Its Comedy Streak, and A Major Reveal|Melissa Leon|November 10, 2014|DAILY BEAST
With some areas, the differences are stark in terms of where this windfall lands.
Trustafarians Want to Tell You How to Live|Joel Kotkin|October 31, 2014|DAILY BEAST
A recent Pew Poll graphically likewise portrays the stark national divide, and the granular differences are gaping.
The 2014 Election Is Yet Another Scrum in the Culture Wars|Lloyd Green|October 27, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Its sanities are stark madness to the matter-of-fact man of affairs.
The Quiver, 2/1900|Various
When the chill morning dawned, their dead lay cold and stark together.
Sketches of Reforms and Reformers, of Great Britain and Ireland|Henry B. Stanton
"I see," answered the clerk, respectfully, for Stark's words led him to think that his guest was a man of wealth.
Driven From Home|Horatio Alger
By the stark unmerciful sunlight; by the rude, revealing glow of the impending day how much more scandalous would it be!
The Life of the Party|Irvin Shrewsbury Cobb
Stark looked over the report and then made a notation on a small pink slip.
Blind Spot|Bascom Jones
British Dictionary definitions for stark (1 of 2)
stark
/ (stɑːk) /
adjective
(usually prenominal)devoid of any elaboration; bluntthe stark facts
grim; desolatea stark landscape
(usually prenominal)utter; absolutestark folly
archaicsevere; violent
archaic, orpoeticrigid, as in death (esp in the phrases stiff and stark, stark dead)
short for stark-naked
adverb
completelystark mad
Derived forms of stark
starkly, adverbstarkness, noun
Word Origin for stark
Old English stearc stiff; related to Old Norse sterkr, Gothic gastaurknan to stiffen
British Dictionary definitions for stark (2 of 2)
Stark
noun
(stɑːk) Dame Freya (Madeline) (ˈfreɪə). 1893–1993, British traveller and writer, whose many books include The Southern Gates of Arabia (1936), Beyond Euphrates (1951), and The Journey's Echo (1963)
(Germanʃtark) Johannes (joˈhanəs). 1874–1957, German physicist, who discovered the splitting of the lines of a spectrum when the source of light is subjected to a strong electrostatic field (Stark effect, 1913): Nobel prize for physics 1919