All inclemency synonyms
inΒ·clemΒ·ent
I i noun inclemency
- severity β harshness, sternness, or rigor: Their lives were marked by severity.
- rigor β strictness, severity, or harshness, as in dealing with people.
- snow β Sir Charles Percy (C. P. Snow) 1905β80, English novelist and scientist.
- chill β When you chill something or when it chills, you lower its temperature so that it becomes colder but does not freeze.
- accuracy β The accuracy of information or measurements is their quality of being true or correct, even in small details.
- hardship β a condition that is difficult to endure; suffering; deprivation; oppression: a life of hardship.
- ordeal β any extremely severe or trying test, experience, or trial.
- precision β the state or quality of being precise.
- difficulty β the fact or condition of being difficult.
- tribulation β grievous trouble; severe trial or suffering.
- firmness β not soft or yielding when pressed; comparatively solid, hard, stiff, or rigid: firm ground; firm texture.
- tenacity β the quality of being tenacious, or of holding fast; persistence: the amazing tenacity of rumors.
- vicissitude β a change or variation occurring in the course of something.
- austerity β Austerity is a situation in which people's living standards are reduced because of economic difficulties.
- harshness β ungentle and unpleasant in action or effect: harsh treatment; harsh manners.
- strictness β characterized by or acting in close conformity to requirements or principles: a strict observance of rituals.
- formality β condition or quality of being formal; accordance with required or traditional rules, procedures, etc.; conventionality.
- sternness β firm, strict, or uncompromising: stern discipline.
- solemnity β the state or character of being solemn; earnestness; gravity; impressiveness: the solemnity of a state funeral.
- acerbity β Acerbity is a kind of bitter, critical humour.
- gravity β the force of attraction by which terrestrial bodies tend to fall toward the center of the earth.
- seriousness β of, showing, or characterized by deep thought.
- coldness β having a relatively low temperature; having little or no warmth: cold water; a cold day.
- stiffness β rigid or firm; difficult or impossible to bend or flex: a stiff collar.
- obduracy β the state or quality of being obdurate.
- inflexibility β not flexible; incapable of or resistant to being bent; rigid: an inflexible steel rod.
- stringency β stringent character or condition: the stringency of poverty.
- asperity β If you say something with asperity, you say it impatiently and severely.
- grimness β stern and admitting of no appeasement or compromise: grim determination; grim necessity.
- hardness β the state or quality of being hard: the hardness of ice.
- rigidity β stiff or unyielding; not pliant or flexible; hard: a rigid strip of metal.
- formalness β being in accordance with the usual requirements, customs, etc.; conventional: to pay one's formal respects.
- frost β Robert (Lee) 1874β1963, U.S. poet.
- refrigeration β the act or process of refrigerating.
- rawness β uncooked, as articles of food: a raw carrot.
- ague β a fever with successive stages of fever and chills esp when caused by malaria
- iciness β in an icy manner: I received him icily because of the harsh way he had treated me.
- freeze β to become hardened into ice or into a solid body; change from the liquid to the solid state by loss of heat.
- frostily β characterized by or producing frost; freezing; very cold: frosty weather.
- chillier β mildly cold or producing a sensation of cold; causing shivering; chill: a chilly breeze.
- draft β a drawing, sketch, or design.
- frigidity β the state or condition of being frigid.
- gelid β very cold; icy.
- algid β chilly or cold
- shivering β to shake or tremble with cold, fear, excitement, etc.
- congelation β the process of congealing
- glaciation β to cover with ice or glaciers.
- frostbite β injury to any part of the body after excessive exposure to extreme cold, sometimes progressing from initial redness and tingling to gangrene.
- wintertime β the season of winter.
- privation β lack of the usual comforts or necessaries of life: His life of privation began to affect his health.