(the adjective stark means stripped of ornament, bare, plain, with the connotation of black and white, unrelieved, or naked)
Elizabeth told the stark truth and it was painful to Mary.
The stark reality was that John had had a alcohol problem for years.
We were awed by the stark beauty of the desert.
Their senior prank was to run stark naked through the crowded cafeteria.
In his fifties he was a little crazy, but in later years he went stark raving mad.
"The ebony black woodcarving stood out in stark relief to the white painted alcove."
The black cat stood out in stark contrast against the white snow.
Stark means bare or empty. An example of stark used in a sentence is: The walls of her office were oddly stark, as if she had just moved into it.
The starkly contrasting colors in the painting caught my eye immediately.
Tony's Iron Man suit stood out out in stark contrast against the muted blues and greens of the uniformed soldiers around him.
Stark Mountain! To get Heatran you must defeat Stark Mountain. Stark Mountain is only accessible after you obtain the National Dex. use yawn and get him on red then use a great ball
Tony stark (iron man) had a introduction when he went to press conference
Tony Stark parents were Maria Stark and Howard Stark and they had a son called Anthony "Tony" Stark and Howard Stark and Maria Stark died in a car crash when their son Tony Stark was only 15.
because in xylene water is inmisible that is why in dean & stark method xylene is use
Use the poke radar outside stark mounting
Hark = Listen to stark = severe or bare in appearance bark = the sharp explosive cry of certain animals park = a large public green area in a town As a sentence, it doesn't mean much of anything since "stark" (referring to appearance) isn't a modifier one would use with "bark" (referring to sound). The original sentence: "Hark, a Stark Bark in the Park!" remarks Patriarch Quark is part of a lesson in Words on the Vine about mother/father vocabulary words and targets "patriarch" -- the male head of a family or tribe. It could also be used as an example of consonance of sound -- the internal rhyming words. I suspect its main function is to show how clever the writer thinks he or she is.
Hark = Listen to stark = severe or bare in appearance bark = the sharp explosive cry of certain animals park = a large public green area in a town As a sentence, it doesn't mean much of anything since "stark" (referring to appearance) isn't a modifier one would use with "bark" (referring to sound). The original sentence: "Hark, a Stark Bark in the Park!" remarks Patriarch Quark is part of a lesson in Words on the Vine about mother/father vocabulary words and targets "patriarch" -- the male head of a family or tribe. It could also be used as an example of consonance of sound -- the internal rhyming words. I suspect its main function is to show how clever the writer thinks he or she is.
Wilbur Stark's birth name is Wilbur Stark.