: a central or fundamental and usually enduring group or part: such as
a
: a relatively small enduring core of society marked by apparent resistance to change or inability to escape a persistent wretched condition (such as poverty or chronic unemployment)
Noun He knows that he can count on the support of a hard core of party loyalists.
Recent Examples on the Web
Noun
Truss campaigned for her party’s leadership on a platform pandering to the Tory’s hard core. Ishaan Tharoor, Washington Post, 5 Sep. 2022 Support for those beliefs goes beyond the hard core of people who openly advocate violence. David Lautersenior Editor, Los Angeles Times, 20 May 2022 Tuesday is for keynotes and consumer hardware, and the next three day are for hard core geeks. Charlie Fink, Forbes, 26 May 2022 Strong believers in political violence, that 5%, are the hardest of the hard core. David Lautersenior Editor, Los Angeles Times, 20 May 2022 Equity believers have to be a hard core buy the dippers to not acknowledge this is one frightening chart with a trajectory aiming at 10,000 and probably lower. Clem Chambers, Forbes, 19 May 2022 The suffix -core comes from hard core, which at first (1841) referred to broken bricks or stones that formed the hard substratum of roads and foundations. Melissa Mohr, The Christian Science Monitor, 7 Feb. 2022 Yet another wave of completely pointless death seems to be motivating a lot of people to finally get vaccinated — but thus far the procrastinators, not the ideological, hard core antivaxxers. Ryan Cooper, The Week, 27 Aug. 2021 And a hard core of vaccine resistance, often tied to far-right populism, helped set the stage for a virulent fourth wave of infections now raging across Europe, triggering stringent lockdowns whose like hadn’t been seen for months.Los Angeles Times, 30 Nov. 2021 See More