Definitions
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun The character of being hard-hearted; want of feeling or tenderness; cruelty; inhumanity.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word hard-heartedness.
Examples
-
Soft-mindedness and hard-heartedness are afoot in America, even in the Church.
Andrew Wilkes: Tough Minds And Tender Hearts: An Open Letter To Young Clergy Andrew Wilkes 2011
-
Soft-mindedness and hard-heartedness are afoot in America, even in the Church.
Andrew Wilkes: Tough Minds And Tender Hearts: An Open Letter To Young Clergy Andrew Wilkes 2011
-
Put away the self-defeating behavior of hard-heartedness that has you enslaved by thanking Jesus for forgiving you.
Recovering From Religious Abuse Jack Watts 2011
-
Put away the self-defeating behavior of hard-heartedness that has you enslaved by thanking Jesus for forgiving you.
Recovering From Religious Abuse Jack Watts 2011
-
Unlike the effects of alcoholism, you will not develop cirrhosis of the liver—just hard-heartedness, which can be equally detrimental to your health.
Recovering From Religious Abuse Jack Watts 2011
-
Unlike the effects of alcoholism, you will not develop cirrhosis of the liver—just hard-heartedness, which can be equally detrimental to your health.
Recovering From Religious Abuse Jack Watts 2011
-
The leads were allowed to be most heavyhearted — say, after having to take out a foe whose humanity was briefly glimpsed — but hard-heartedness was kept generally to the casting margins, or acknowledged under the cover of exigency.
-
The leads were allowed to be most heavyhearted — say, after having to take out a foe whose humanity was briefly glimpsed — but hard-heartedness was kept generally to the casting margins, or acknowledged under the cover of exigency.
-
Put away the self-defeating behavior of hard-heartedness that has you enslaved by thanking Jesus for forgiving you.
Recovering From Religious Abuse Jack Watts 2011
-
Unlike the effects of alcoholism, you will not develop cirrhosis of the liver—just hard-heartedness, which can be equally detrimental to your health.
Recovering From Religious Abuse Jack Watts 2011
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.