English
Etymology
From Middle English chalengynge; equivalent to challenge + -ing.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈt͡ʃælənd͡ʒɪŋ/, /ˈt͡ʃælɪnd͡ʒɪŋ/
Verb
challenging
- present participle and gerund of challenge
Adjective
challenging (comparative more challenging, superlative most challenging)
- Difficult, hard to do.
Antonyms
Derived terms
Translations
difficult; hard to do
- Bulgarian: предизвикателен (bg) (predizvikatelen)
- Catalan: desafiador
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 很有挑戰性, 很有挑战性 (hěn yǒu tiǎnzhànxìng), 困难的
- Danish: udfordrende
- Dutch: uitdagend (nl)
- Finnish: haastava (fi), vaikea (fi), hankala (fi)
- French: difficile (fr), stimulant (fr), éprouvant (fr)
- German: anspruchsvoll (de), herausfordernd (de)
- Hebrew: מאתגר (me'atger)
- Hindi: चुनौतीपूर्ण (cunautīpūrṇ, literally “challenge-full”)
- Italian: impegnativo (it), difficoltoso (it)
- Polish: trudny (pl)
- Portuguese: desafiador (pt)
- Russian: испы́тывающий (ru) (ispýtyvajuščij), трудновыполни́мый (ru) m (trudnovypolnímyj)
- Spanish: desafiante (es), desafiador
- Thai: please add this translation if you can
- Uzbek: qiyin (uz)
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Noun
challenging (plural challengings)
- The act of making a challenge.
1918, Estcourt Rowland Metzner, The conflict of tax laws, page 151:There are always sincere challengings of the findings, always the objections (sincere in another sense) of those whose interests seem threatened.
See also