Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    Res·tive
    /ˈrestiv/

    adjective

  2. People also ask

  3. Restive means stubbornly resisting control or marked by impatience or uneasiness. Learn the origin, synonyms, examples, and usage of this adjective from the Merriam-Webster dictionary.

  4. Restive means unwilling to be controlled or be patient. Learn how to use this formal adjective in different contexts, with synonyms and antonyms, and see examples from the Cambridge English Corpus and the Hansard archive.

  5. Restive definition: impatient of control, restraint, or delay, as persons; restless; uneasy.. See examples of RESTIVE used in a sentence.

  6. To be restive is to be impatient or on edge — it's an edgy state. When you feel like your skin is too tight and your nerves are ready to snap, when you feel ready to explode, you are restive.

  7. Restive means unwilling to be controlled or be patient. Learn how to use this formal adjective in different contexts, with synonyms and antonyms, and see examples from various sources.

  8. Restive means impatient or fidgety under pressure or restraint; restless is being uneasy, unquiet, or unable to relax or rest. See also related terms, translations, and examples of restive and restless.

  9. restive. adjective. /ˈrestɪv/. /ˈrestɪv/. (formal) unable to stay still, or unwilling to be controlled, especially because you feel bored or not satisfied. The crowd was growing increasingly restive. The news was relayed to the restive citizens. Word Origin.

  1. People also search for