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adj

abrasive

uh-BRAY-sihv
adj
1
Rough enough to grind or wear away a surface through friction.
"The cleaning pad has an abrasive side for tough stains."
2
Harsh and unpleasantly blunt in manner, tending to irritate others.
"His abrasive management style drove several employees to quit."
"She softened her naturally abrasive tone during the interview."
noun
1
A substance, such as sandpaper or pumice, used for grinding, polishing, or smoothing.
"Use a fine abrasive to remove the old varnish."

How to Use Abrasive

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishEither something physically rough enough to scrape a surface, or a person whose manner is unpleasantly harsh.

Common mistake

When describing personality, abrasive is always negative — it means harsh and grating, not simply direct or confident.

Common pairings
abrasive personality abrasive manner mildly abrasive

Word Forms

more abrasive comparative, abrasives plural, most abrasive superlative

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The cleaning pad has an _____ side for tough stains.

Etymology

Borrowed from Medieval Latin abrasivus, built on the same root as "abrasion" and "abrade."

Rhymes for abrasive

See all rhymes for abrasive →
Definitions: FreeDict original editorial