radical
drastic ; radical ; deep-seated ; dramatic ; vowed ; hardliner ; bigot ; bigoted.
Even when drastic revision is seen to be necessary and accepted, the point in time at which to conduct this extensive review can be difficult to select.
A similar approach to arrangement, but one which is less radical than reader interest arrangement, is to rely upon broad categorisation rather than detailed specification.
Librarians have always had a deep-seated, and often irrational, faith in education - especially book-centred, information education - as a panacea for society's ills.
This kind of distribution is represented by a curve which shows a hugely lopsided frequency for the majority, then a dramatic drop, dribbling off into a long tail of mostly zeros.
The archtypical animal rights activist is embodied in Emma Peel, a suicidal grammar school dropout, a vowed fruitarian, & member of the Animal Liberation Front.
Iranians have voted for hardliners just out of spite.
It has become far too easy for charlatans and bigots to harness religion to their own political agenda.
As a bigoted radio personality incites whites to seek revenge, tensions mount and Smith fights to slake the anger that engulfs him.
cambio radical
revulsion
radical change
sea change
I have spoken of enumeration in terms perhaps dictated by a revulsion from the view so often held that the compilation of subject catalogues is the true and proper function of the bibliographer.
Theses paintings represent the continuation of China's long pictorial heritage in an era of radical change and challenges for artists.
Local publishing in the developing world will undergo a sea change if the Bank adopts the recommendations of the seminar as policy.
cambio radical de postura
about-face
about-turn
Tanzania provides one of the most extreme examples of an about-face in food marketing.
The Attorney General was left with egg on his chin when no-one, not even his Prime Minister, bothered to inform him of this about-turn.
causa radical, la [Expresión usualmente acompañada del artículo]
radical cause, the
Edwards had already shown his identification with the radical cause two years earlier by signing the Charter.
hincha radical del fútbol
football hooligan
The violence wasn't caused by war vets but by football hooligans.
volver radical
radicalise [radicalize,-USA]
The report on the likely impact of the Iraqi war on British Muslims warned that the conflict would embitter and radicalize them.