English, asked by noahflure2, 11 months ago

Use this online dictionary to look up the word recalcitrant. Describe the word’s origin, the most common meaning of the word, two synonyms, and two antonyms.

Answers

Answered by IsitaJ07
26

Answer:

ORIGIN:

The word recalcitrant is origin from Latin (American) language.

At first it was recalcitraire but later it has been pronounced as "recalcitrant"

MEANING:

having an obstinately uncooperative attitude towards authority and well disciplined. (non-cooperative)

SYNONYMS:

Refractory , uncomfortable, Awkward etc

ANTONYMS:

amenable, docile, compliant.

I hope it may help you.

THANKS!! ;-)☺️☺️☺️☺️

Answered by julia1120894
0

Answer:

Sample Response: "Recalcitrant" comes from the Latin word "recalcitrare," which means "to be disobedient." The word "recalcitrant" means "stubbornly resistant." Two synonyms are "obstreperous" and "willful." Two antonyms are "compliant" and "obedient."

Explanation:

the other person is correct but this is the sample response on edge.

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