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  1. If you describe someone or something as recalcitrant, you mean that they are unwilling to obey orders or are difficult to deal with.

  2. If someone is so pig-headed that he won't budge on an issue, call him recalcitrant. Not that it will make a difference... Recalcitrant is from Latin calcitrare, meaning "to kick," so someone who is recalcitrant is kicking back against what's wanted of them.

  3. The meaning of RECALCITRANT is obstinately defiant of authority or restraint. How to use recalcitrant in a sentence. Did you know? Synonym Discussion of Recalcitrant.

  4. If you describe someone or something as recalcitrant, you mean that they are unwilling to obey orders or are difficult to deal with.

  5. These heartening recollections made me forget the loss of Twist, the recalcitrant cow, and the dilemma that confronted me. In most instances the recalcitrant part of the provincial populations prevailed. Recalcitrant definition: resisting authority or control; not obedient or compliant; refractory. .

  6. recalcitrant is of multiple origins. Either (i) a borrowing from French. Or (ii) a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: French récalcitrant; Latin recalcitrant-, recalcitrāns.

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  8. adjective. /rɪˈkælsətrənt/. (formal) unwilling to obey rules or follow instructions; difficult to control a recalcitrant child. Take your English to the next level. The Oxford Learner’s Thesaurus explains the difference between groups of similar words.

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