Found 3 items, similar to stark.
English → Indonesian (quick)
Definition: stark
kaku
English → English (WordNet)
Definition: stark
stark
adj 1: devoid of any qualifications or disguise or adornment; 
“the
blunt truth”; 
“the crude facts”; 
“facing the stark
reality of the deadline” [syn: 
blunt, 
crude(a), 
stark(a)]
2: severely simple; 
“a stark interior” [syn: 
austere, 
severe]
3: complete or extreme; 
“stark poverty”; 
“a stark contrast”
4: without qualification; used informally as (often pejorative)
intensifiers; 
“an arrant fool”; 
“a complete coward”; 
“a
consummate fool”; 
“a double-dyed villain”; 
“gross
negligence”; 
“a perfect idiot”; 
“pure folly”; 
“what a
sodding mess”; 
“stark staring mad”; 
“a thoroughgoing
villain”; 
“utter nonsense” [syn: 
arrant(a), 
complete(a),
consummate(a), 
double-dyed(a), 
everlasting(a), 
gross(a),
perfect(a), 
pure(a), 
sodding(a), 
stark(a), 
staring(a),
thoroughgoing(a), 
utter(a)]
5: providing no shelter or sustenance; 
“bare rocky hills”;
“barren lands”; 
“the bleak treeless regions of the high
Andes”; 
“the desolate surface of the moon”; 
“a stark
landscape” [syn: 
bare, 
barren, 
bleak, 
desolate]
stark
adv : completely; 
“stark mad”; 
“mouth stark open”
English → English (gcide)
Definition: Stark
Stark 
\Stark\ (st[aum]rk), a. [Compar. 
Starker (-[~e]r);
superl. 
Starkest.] [OE. stark stiff, strong, AS. stearc;
akin to OS. starc strong, D. sterk, OHG. starc, starah, G. &
Sw. stark, Dan. st[ae]rk, Icel. sterkr, Goth. gasta['u]rknan
to become dried up, Lith. str["e]gti to stiffen, to freeze.
Cf. 
Starch, a. & n.]
1. Stiff; rigid. --Chaucer.
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Whose senses all were straight benumbed and stark.
--Spenser.
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His heart gan wax as stark as marble stone.
--Spenser.
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Many a nobleman lies stark and stiff
Under the hoofs of vaunting enemies. --Shak.
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The north is not so stark and cold. --B. Jonson.
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2. Complete; absolute; full; perfect; entire. [Obs.]
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Consider the stark security
The common wealth is in now. --B. Jonson.
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3. Strong; vigorous; powerful.
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A stark, moss-trooping Scot. --Sir W.
Scott.
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Stark beer, boy, stout and strong beer. --Beau. &
Fl.
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4. Severe; violent; fierce. [Obs.] 
“In starke stours” [i.
e., in fierce combats]. --Chaucer.
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5. Mere; sheer; gross; entire; downright.
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He pronounces the citation stark nonsense.
--Collier.
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Rhetoric is very good or stark naught; there's no
medium in rhetoric. --Selden.
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Stark 
\Stark\ (st[aum]rk), adv.
Wholly; entirely; absolutely; quite; as, stark mad. --Shak.
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Held him strangled in his arms till he was stark dead.
--Fuller.
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Stark naked, wholly naked; quite bare.
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Strip your sword stark naked. --Shak.
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Note: According to Professor Skeat, 
“stark-naked” is
derived from steort-naked, or start-naked, literally
tail-naked, and hence wholly naked. If this etymology
be true the preferable form is stark-naked.
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Stark 
\Stark\, v. t.
To stiffen. [R.]
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If horror have not starked your limbs. --H. Taylor.
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