Abrasive in a sentence as a noun

Have you ever been told you're too curt, abrasive, or aggressive?

Not only that, but he was fairly abrasive in the way he chose to respond to backlash.

"I used to think Stallman was an abrasive fanatic but now I think otherwise.

Ulrich's abrasiveness just added to his mismanagement, rather than being the sole source of it.

I could be reading all this wrong, but I get the impression that dedicating so much of your life to Cydia is going to burn you out eventually, abrasive community or not.

I've met my fair share of arrogant, abrasive, unsympathetic, or misogynistic geeks who seem to have mostly become that as a reaction to having been bullied or ostracized.

>shut the **** up and write some ******* code [links to argument that simply writing code is the best way to learn programming]Way to confirm stereotypes that programmers are abrasive and narrow minded.

From an interpersonal standpoint, they are noted to be harsh, hostile, manipulative, lacking in empathy, cold-hearted, and abrasive to those they deem to be their inferiors.

Abrasive in a sentence as an adjective

The act of making the system exclusive is abrasive to so many hackers, where information is free to all, and the modifiers of this information are those with the recognizable merit to affect it.

Linus successfully manages Linux despite being occasionally abrasive.

Why should we accept unnecessarily abrasive behaviour as acceptable anywhere?

Also, OP is providing a constructive analysis, which is quite better than just "this is BS"> So may I kindly request you to cut the **** and stop the bias and avoid provoking people into such techno-wars?You are the one using abrasive language here.

> He is capable of arguing with people with strongly opposing views with civilityYou're clearly talking about a different tptacek, widely known on this site for his coarsely abrasive, impossibly high friction, social interactions and not admitting he's wrong on issues trivial or important.

My professional experience involves enough interaction with extraordinarily talented engineers who have extremely abrasive personalities.

> My professional experience involves enough interaction > with extraordinarily talented engineers who have > extremely abrasive personalities.

Abrasive definitions

noun

a substance that abrades or wears down

See also: abradant

adjective

causing abrasion

See also: scratchy

adjective

sharply disagreeable; rigorous; "the harsh facts of court delays"; "an abrasive character"

See also: harsh