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callous
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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English
Etymology
From Latin callōsus (“hard-skinned”), from callum (“hardened skin”) + -ōsus.
Pronunciation
Adjective
callous (comparative more callous, superlative most callous)
- (figurative) Emotionally hardened; unfeeling and indifferent to the suffering/feelings of others.
- Synonyms: heartless, insensitive; see also Thesaurus:stern
- She was so callous that she could criticise a cancer patient for wearing a wig.
- 2021 September 15, Laura Martin, “How talent shows became TV's most bizarre programmes”, in BBC:
- Re-watching some of the audition rounds of these shows now, you're struck by how callous the judges' comments often were, and how they presented a cruel spectacle in which the audience were set up to laugh at the "deluded" members of the public who believed they could sing.
- (literal) Having calluses, or relating to calluses.
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
emotionally hardened
|
having calluses
|
Noun
callous (plural callouses)
- Alternative form of callus.
- 1963, Lester del Rey, The Sky Is Falling:
- Hanson was beginning to feel annoyance at the suddenly cocksure and unsympathetic girl, but he stood fully erect and flexed his muscles. There wasn't even a trace of bedsoreness, though he had been flat on his back long enough to grow callouses.
Verb
callous (third-person singular simple present callouses, present participle callousing, simple past and past participle calloused)
- Alternative form of callus.
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