BARBARIC


Meaning of BARBARIC in English

bar ‧ bar ‧ ic /bɑːˈbærɪk $ bɑːr-/ BrE AmE adjective

[ Date: 1300-1400 ; Language: Old French ; Origin: barbarique , from Latin , from Greek , from barbaros ; ⇨ ↑ barbarous ]

very cruel and violent SYN barbarous :

The way the whales are killed is nothing short of barbaric.

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THESAURUS

▪ cruel deliberately hurting people or making them suffer:

It was cruel to lock him in there all day.

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Her father had been very cruel to her when she was a child.

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a cruel, selfish woman

▪ heartless not feeling any pity and not caring about other people or their problems:

How could you be so heartless!

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He was cold and heartless and had no concern for the welfare of his employees.

▪ sadistic getting pleasure from making other people suffer:

a sadistic killer

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a sadistic thing to do

▪ barbaric extremely cruel, in a way that shocks people:

a barbaric punishment

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a barbaric sport

▪ vicious very violent and cruel, especially by suddenly attacking someone and causing injury to them:

a vicious attack on an innocent man

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Some dogs can be vicious.

▪ brutal very cruel and violent, in a way that shows no human feelings:

a brutal dictator

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the brutal methods used by the secret police

▪ inhumane inhumane conditions, treatment etc are not considered acceptable because they cause too much suffering:

the inhumane treatment of prisoners

▪ cold-blooded a cold-blooded murder, attack etc is done without showing any feeling or pity for the person who is attacked. A cold-blooded killer kills people without showing any pity:

a woman 's cold-blooded murder of her devoted husband

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a cold-blooded psychopath

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English.      Longman - Словарь современного английского языка.