adjective
providing or yielding meagerly in return for much effort; demanding or unrewarding.
Hardscrabble, yielding a meager return for much effort, is an Americanism that originally began as two separate words: the adjective hard difficult, arduous and the noun scrabble scratching, clawing, scramble; the phrase meant painful effort under hard conditions, later applied particularly to farmland that required much work for little reward. By the first half of the 19th century, Hard-Scrabble (variously spelled) was used as a placename for a remote town or region where life was difficult. The current sense yielding meager results dates from the second half of the 19th century. Hardscrabble entered English in the second half of the 18th century.
The oil and gas business is full of guys like T. Boone Pickens, self-made men who rose from a hardscrabble life on the prairie to become titans of the industry.
Maybe you caught tinges of her vivid, hardscrabble love letter crackling through tinny speakers at a CVS, and paid attention because its one of the few songs in the commercially programmed soundtrack of our mundane errands that no one should have objections to.
adjective
contrary; peevish; stubborn.
Scots and Northern Irish thrawn, contrary; peevish; stubborn, in origin is the past participle of the verb thraw to twist, wrench, distort, the Scots form of throw. The sense to twist, wrench is one of the senses of Middle English throuen and Old English 喧堯娶櫻滄硃紳 in addition to the more common sense to hurl, cast, throw. Throw and thraw are related to Dutch draaien to turn, rotate and German drehen to twist, turn. Readers familiar with the “Star Wars” extended universe may recognize thrawn for a different reason: Grand Admiral Thrawn is a character introduced by author Timothy Zahn in the 1991 novel Heir to the Empire. In the “Star Wars” novels, however, the name Thrawn is short for Mitthrawnuruodo. While we cant say whether the name was inspired by the Scots term, it seems fair to classify the character Thrawn as a rather peevish or stubborn fellow. Thrawn entered English in the late 15th century.
He reckons it was his doggedness that got him through. Im a very thrawn, determined person so I dont like to get beat, he said.
The trouble was that a narrative structure implied sequence, and any display based upon the accretion of knowledge in a certain order would be vulnerable to thrawn visitor who, human and contrary, enters at the wrong end of a sequence; or, worse, grazes at random.
noun
mental or emotional stability or composure, especially under tension or strain; calmness.
Equanimity, mental or emotional stability or composure, ultimately comes from Latin 硃梗梁喝硃紳勳鳥勳喧櫻莽 (inflectional stem 硃梗梁喝硃紳勳鳥勳喧櫻喧-), originally goodwill, favor, and later calmness of mind, tranquillity. 插梗梁喝硃紳勳鳥勳喧櫻莽 is a derivative of the rare adjective aequanimis, also aequanimus calm, composed. The adjectives are compounds of aequus even, plain, equal and the noun animus mind, spirit, feelings. The last element of equanimity, –ity, comes via the Old French suffix –ite from the Latin abstract noun suffix –勳喧櫻莽, which expresses a state, condition, or quality. Equanimity entered English in the early 17th century.
A truly brave man is ever serene; he is never taken by surprise; nothing ruffles the equanimity of his spirit.
After all, there are泭middle schoolersjust as there are some adults and other childrenwho have weathered the past year with relative equanimity.