stark
1 Americanadjective
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sheer, utter, downright, or complete.
This plan is stark madness!
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harsh, grim, or desolate, as a view, place, etc..
Her photos capture the stark desert landscape.
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extremely simple or severe.
With its stark interior and rough ride, the car scores low in our luxury car ranking.
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bluntly or sternly plain; not softened or glamorized.
He panicked suddenly at the stark reality of the approaching deadline.
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distinct, sharp, or vivid.
The thriving community gardens stood in stark contrast to vacant land and abandoned buildings.
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stiff or rigid in substance, muscles, etc.
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rigid in death.
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Archaic. strong; powerful; massive or robust.
adverb
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utterly, absolutely, or quite.
stark mad.
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Chiefly Scot. and North England. in a stark manner; stoutly or vigorously.
noun
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Harold Raynsford 1880–1972, U.S. admiral.
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Johannes 1874–1957, German physicist: Nobel Prize 1919.
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John, 1728–1822, American Revolutionary War general.
adjective
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(usually prenominal) devoid of any elaboration; blunt
the stark facts
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grim; desolate
a stark landscape
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(usually prenominal) utter; absolute
stark folly
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archaic severe; violent
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archaic rigid, as in death (esp in the phrases stiff and stark, stark dead )
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short for stark-naked
adverb
noun
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Dame Freya ( Madeline ) (ˈfreɪə). 1893–1993, British traveller and writer, whose many books include The Southern Gates of Arabia (1936), Beyond Euphrates (1951), and The Journey's Echo (1963)
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Johannes (joˈhanəs). 1874–1957, German physicist, who discovered the splitting of the lines of a spectrum when the source of light is subjected to a strong electrostatic field ( Stark effect , 1913): Nobel prize for physics 1919
Related Words
Other Word Forms
Etymology
Origin of stark
First recorded before 900; (adjective) Middle English; Old English stearc “stiff, firm”; cognate with German stark “strong”; akin to Old Norse sterkr “strong”; akin to starch, stare; (adverb) Middle English sterke, derivative of the adjective
Explanation
Stark means "complete or extreme," like the stark contrast between your music taste — punk and weird metal — and your mom's, with all her 1950's doo-wop favorites. In describing a place, stark means "providing no shelter or sustenance." A barren desert or a room with no furniture or curtains is stark. It can also mean "severe, stern, or austere," like the stark beauty of the rocky cliffs in the west of Ireland. Stark can also be used to mean "totally." If you are called stark, raving mad, there's no question about it: you are acting completely crazy.
Vocabulary lists containing stark
Words from "The Avengers"
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"To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee, Chapters 7–11
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The Catcher in the Rye
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Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
But, they add, Putin will be confronted with a stark choice in the coming months because of a simple arithmetic of attrition.
From The Wall Street Journal • May 27, 2026
The response from chief executive Priya Dogra was a stark contrast to the tone Channel 4 had adopted in correspondence with the BBC previously.
From BBC • May 22, 2026
That’s a stark contrast with Shein, which has been accused of overworking and underpaying its workers and of being a massive industry polluter.
From MarketWatch • May 19, 2026
Pettibon’s stark four-bar design for the latter is one of punk’s most iconic images, as recognizable as the Ramones’ presidential seal and the Misfits’ skeleton face.
From Los Angeles Times • May 18, 2026
And it must be noted that the surrounding country where they were located was stark desert and not exactly crawling with wildlife.
From This Side of Wild by Gary Paulsen
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.