Stubborn in a sentence as an adjective

He was a fighter, he was stubborn, he was young, and some say he took his own life.

It is a design mistake that was pointed out to him years ago, but he is too stubborn or arrogant to fix it.

One is an admirable goal for a whale of a company and the other is a stubborn denial of contrary opinions.

They just seem to be very stubborn about it, just like they were too stubborn to fire the Nokia CEO before Elop, for 4 years after the iPhone launched.

Many of my biggest successes were the result of my stubbornness, when I was right and conventional wisdom and the feedback of others would have held me back.

The smart ones sold out to bigger companies, the stubborn ones clung desperately to their dialup business or spent all their money trying to go to WiMax and bypass the telcos.

So even if you try to make an argument with some stubborn manager that you are severely underpaid you can't start throwing teammates under the bus for disclosing their salaries.

Network transparency, non-traditional filesystems, etc, have all been hampered by too stubborn of a refusal to question the assumptions as to what a kernel and OS can and should be.

He is too stubborn or too blind to state this truth; instead he hides behind "business community is still excited".Stallman organizing protest can not be more wrong than Pike not acknowledging the problem.

Imo a stubborn refusal to acknowledge mistakes/errors is a big weakness and pg is demonstrating that weakness with passive-aggressive pushbacks like the one on Twitter "Don't say things people want to misunderstand.

Stubborn definitions

adjective

tenaciously unwilling or marked by tenacious unwillingness to yield

See also: obstinate unregenerate

adjective

not responding to treatment; "a stubborn infection"; "a refractory case of acne"; "stubborn rust stains"

See also: refractory