Ooh look at today’s dictionary.com Word of the Day…

Here’s the Word of the Day for today:

Word of the Day — Wednesday October 18, 2006

obstreperous \uhb-STREP-uhr-uhs; ob-\, adjective:
1. Noisily and stubbornly defiant; unruly.
2. Noisy, clamorous, or boisterous.

He began standing up to the Orderlies, talking back, openly obstreperous.
– John Darnton, The Experiment

When he was ordered from above to expel two obstreperous comrades — they insisted on challenging the leadership — he found himself “caught between my Jeffersonian upbringing and my Party loyalty.”
– William Herrick, “Truth Was the Last Straw”, New York Times, July 12, 1987

He becomes obstreperous and truculent as an infant in need of an afternoon nap.
– James Doran, “Bonus question raises ire of fund managers”, Times (London), April 19, 2001

Many booksellers . . . were reluctant to carry books that would attract the sometimes obstreperous youngsters who lived by rock and roll.
– Ray Walters, “Paperback Talk”, New York Times, September 13, 1981

Obstreperous derives from Latin obstrepere, “to make a noise, to clamor at or against; hence, to disturb, to interrupt by clamor,” from ob-, “toward, against” + strepere, “to make a loud noise.”

See Dictionary.com Entry and Pronunciation for obstreperous

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