answersLogoWhite

0

curmudgeon

User Avatar

Wiki User

15y ago

What else can I help you with?

Continue Learning about Gerontology
Related Questions

What is a curmudgeon?

A crusty irascible cantankerous old person full of stubborn ideas .


How do you not be stubborn?

You be patient and respectful of others ideas.


What do you call a person who is against new ideas?

A stubborn person who always disagree with others or on an idea.


Another way to use a person's ideas but not word for word is to?

Another way to use a person's ideas but not word for word is to paraphrase.


Does inflexible means stubborn?

Yes, the definition of stubborn is a person's refusal to change ideas or opinion(s). The definition to inflexable is nearly identical or rather is identical,just that the wording is different which is; a persons unwillingness to change or compromise.


When a person rephrases another persons ideas they are?

paraphrasing.


What is mean by stubborn streak?

The phrase "stubborn streak" appears from time to time in contemporary English. Its fundamental meaning is "being characterized by a general tendency toward stubbornness as a natural part of one's personality." Thus, a person with a "stubborn streak" will put up resistance to ideas or to people (or otherwise be "stubborn") as a matter of course, if only in certain situations or when particular circumstances arise.


Why do people talk in memes?

People talk in memes to spread cultural ideas from one person to another.


Which tense should you use to discuss your own ideas or the ideas of another person?

When discussing your own ideas, use the present tense. When discussing the ideas of another person, use past or present tense depending on whether the idea is still relevant.


Another way to use a person's ideas but not word-for-word is to?

Paraphrase the idea.


What tense should you use to discuss your own idea or the ideas of another person?

the present tense


What do you call a person who takes credit for other peoples efforts?

PlagiarizerTo use and pass off (the ideas or writings of another) as one's own.2. To appropriate for use as one's own passages or ideas from (another).v.intr.To put forth as original to oneself the ideas or words of another.