Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    stark
    /stɑːk/

    adjective

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. STARK definition: 1. empty, simple, or obvious, especially without decoration or anything that is not necessary: 2…. Learn more.

  3. The meaning of STARK is rigid in or as if in death. How to use stark in a sentence.

  4. Definition of 'stark' stark. (stɑːʳk ) Word forms: starker , starkest. 1. adjective. Stark choices or statements are harsh and unpleasant. U.K. companies face a stark choice if they want to stay competitive. The conviction should send out a stark warning to other motorists. starkly adverb [ADVERB with verb, ADVERB adjective]

  5. Stark definition: sheer, utter, downright, or complete. See examples of STARK used in a sentence.

  6. STARK meaning: 1. empty, simple, or obvious, especially without decoration or anything that is not necessary: 2…. Learn more.

  7. In describing a place, stark means "providing no shelter or sustenance." A barren desert or a room with no furniture or curtains is stark. It can also mean "severe, stern, or austere," like the stark beauty of the rocky cliffs in the west of Ireland.

  8. Definition of stark adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  9. 1. Clearly distinguished or delineated: a stark contrast. 2. a. Bare, desolate, or unadorned: an apartment with stark white walls; the stark beauty of the desert landscape. b. Severe or unmitigated; harsh or grim: "[They] found it hard to accept such a stark portrait of unrelieved failure" (W. Bruce Lincoln). 3.

  10. 1. adjective. Stark choices or statements are harsh and unpleasant. Companies face a stark choice if they want to stay competitive. starkly adverb. That issue is presented starkly and brutally by Bob Graham and David Cairns. 2. adjective.

  11. stark (somewhat formal) used for describing an unpleasant fact or difference that is very obvious: He had to face the stark reality of the situation. The simple/plain truth may be something that some people do not want to hear, but it may be good for them to hear it anyway.