hardiness

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English

Etymology

From Middle English hardynesse; equivalent to hardy +‎ -ness.

Noun

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hardiness (countable and uncountable, plural hardinesses)

  1. The quality of being hardy.
    1. The quality of being able to withstand fatigue and hardship; (of a plant) the quality of being resistant to cold or other environmental conditions.
      Kale is known for its winter-hardiness.
      • 1642, John Milton, An apology against a pamphlet call’d A modest confutation of the animadversions upon the remonstrant against Smectymnuus, London: John Rothwell, p. 13,[1]
        [] with usefull and generous labours preserving the bodies health, and hardinesse; to render lightsome, cleare, and not lumpish obedience to the minde,
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      • 1915, Nellie McClung, In Times Like These, Toronto: McLeod & Allen, Chapter 4,[2]
        Wild wheat is small and hard, quite capable of looking after itself, but its heads contain only a few small kernels. Cultivated wheat has lost its hardiness and its self-reliance, but its heads are filled with large kernels which feed the nation.
    2. (obsolete) The quality of being bold in the face of risk or authority.
      Synonyms: hardihood, audacity, boldness, firmness, assurance
  2. (obsolete) Hardship; fatigue.

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