obstinate, dogged, stubborn, pertinacious, mulish mean fixed and unyielding in course or purpose. obstinate implies usually an unreasonable persistence.
an obstinate proponent of conspiracy theories dogged suggests an admirable often tenacious and unwavering persistence.
pursued the story with dogged perseverance stubborn implies sturdiness in resisting change which may or may not be admirable.
a person too stubborn to admit error pertinacious suggests an annoying or irksome persistence.
a pertinacious salesclerk refusing to take no for an answer mulish implies a thoroughly unreasonable obstinacy.
a mulish determination to have his own way
Examples of obstinate in a Sentence
More than 30 cities had sued the gun industry for the costs of violence on their streets. Cuomo had brashly stepped into the legal swamp, hoping he could be the guy to force concessions from an obstinate industry.— Matt Bai, Newsweek, 5 Feb. 2001With The New York Times calling Klein "a weak nominee" and editorializing that the administration should withdraw him, and with his opponents obstinate and apparently committed, he seemed for a moment to be in serious trouble.— John Heilemann, Wired, November 2000What did they know of life? All they knew was how to parrot the stock phrases of their profession and to continue to be obstinate until somebody, somewhere, paid up.— Alexander McCall Smith, The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency, 1998When my father finished telling the story, he looked at me, then looked away. A moment of silence lodged between us, an old and obstinate silence.— Bernard Cooper, Harper's, August 1992
his obstinate refusal to obey
My parents remain as obstinate as ever.
These example sentences are selected automatically from various online news sources to reflect current usage of the word 'obstinate.' Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Middle English, from Anglo-French obstinat, Latin obstinatus, past participle of obstinare to be resolved, from ob- in the way + -stinare (akin to stare to stand)