˜yĐÄvlog

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hard-edged

[ hahrd-ejd ]

adjective

  1. realistic and uncompromising:

    a hard-edged documentary.



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˜yĐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of hard-edged1

First recorded in 1950–55
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Hackman's hard-edged screen persona made him ideal for the intelligent but ruthless characters in film adaptations of John Grisham novels - such as The Firm and Runaway Jury - in which, for the first time, he and former flatmate Dustin Hoffman appeared on screen together.

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“Some in the markets may hope that the tariffs are a hard-edged negotiating stance and that Trump may back down at the last minute as negotiations with Canada and Mexico are ongoing,” said Christopher Rupkey, chief economist at Fwdbonds in New York.

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It wasn’t until I began listening to these recordings by the Barcelona-based Cuarteto Casals, though, that it dawned on me how similar the playing of most other groups is: biting and hard-edged, bows digging into the strings.

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Harris also failed to bear down on her hard-edged prosecutor-versus-felon narrative, which figured prominently during the early, effective stages of her campaign.

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Musicals — good ones, imaginative ones, like “Emilia PĂ©rez” — have a way of rocketing underappreciated talents into the stratosphere and, in a sequence like the hard-edged, dazzlingly choreographed “El Mal” number, in which she slices a scorn-filled path across a gala benefit of rich hypocrites, it’s easy to believe Saldaña could be the most versatile screen actor around.

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