resilientvsbrittle
Resilient means able to recover quickly from difficulty — bending under stress and springing back. Brittle means hard but liable to snap, with no give to absorb a shock. One takes the hit and bounces back; the other cracks all at once.
A slab swings down on a small ball three times, each blow harder; the third pins it flat to the floor — then it strains, slips, pushes again, and drags itself upright with one hard-won hop, never unbreakable, only unwilling to stay down.
/rɪˈzɪliənt//rɪˈzɪliənt/·adjectiveTwo beams carry the same rising load; one bows and springs back unharmed, while the rigid one never bends a hair, looks the tougher of the two, then cracks clean through and drops away — its stub still perfectly straight.
/ˈbrɪtl//ˈbrɪtl/·adjectiveBoth words describe how something behaves under stress, and they sit at opposite ends. Resilient comes from the Latin resilire, 'to leap back': a resilient material returns to shape after bending, and resilient people absorb shocks and recover — the damage doesn't stick. Brittle, from an old Germanic root for breaking, stays rigid and stores the strain instead of absorbing it, until it fails without warning. The difference is what happens after the load: the resilient thing bends and recovers, the brittle thing holds firm and then shatters.
What each means
resilient
Resilient things bounce back. The word comes from the Latin resilire, 'to leap back', and keeps both its physical sense — a resilient material returns to shape after being bent — and its human one: resilient people, communities, and economies absorb shocks and recover. Resilience does not mean being unaffected; it means the damage doesn't stick. The bent branch straightens; the failed founder starts again.
brittle
Brittle things are strong right up until they are not. A brittle material — glass, dry bone, aged plastic — resists pressure without flexing, storing the strain instead of absorbing it, until it fails all at once and shatters. The word's lesson is the opposite of resilient: what cannot bend has nowhere to put a shock, so it breaks. Figuratively, a brittle smile or a brittle peace is one held rigid over tension, and just as quick to crack.
At a glance
| resilient | brittle | |
|---|---|---|
| Meaning | recovers quickly from stress; springs back | hard but snaps under stress |
| Under stress | bends, absorbs, recovers | stays rigid, then shatters |
| Root | Latin resilire (leap back) | Old Germanic 'to break' |
| Often with | an economy, a community, a child, an ecosystem | glass, bones, rock, an alliance, peace |
| Noun | resilience | brittleness |
| Example | A resilient economy bounces back. | Brittle glass shatters at a knock. |
How to remember the difference
Watch what the blow does. Resilient is the small ball pinned flat by the slab that strains and drags itself back upright — it isn't unbreakable, it just refuses to stay down; the damage lands but doesn't stick. Brittle is the rigid beam that won't bend a hair, looks the stronger of the two, then cracks clean through with no warning. One bends and recovers; the other holds firm and snaps. If it takes the hit and bounces back, it's resilient; if it can't give and shatters, it's brittle. (And note: robust is a third story — it resists the hit so hard it barely lands.)
Examples
resilient
- Children are often remarkably resilient, recovering from upheavals that overwhelm adults.
- The economy proved resilient, absorbing the shock and adapting within a year.
- Engineers chose a flexible alloy to make the bridge resilient to earthquakes.
brittle
- Glass is hard but brittle: it shatters rather than bends.
- The alliance looked solid but proved brittle, cracking at the first dispute.
- Years of frost can make exposed rock brittle enough to crumble at a touch.
They are direct opposites — brittle is listed among resilient's antonyms, and resilient among brittle's. Keep the trio straight: resilient bends and recovers, robust barely feels the hit, and brittle neither bends nor recovers — it simply snaps.
FAQ
- What is the difference between resilient and brittle?
- Resilient means able to bend under stress and recover; brittle means hard but liable to snap with no give. One bounces back, the other shatters.
- Are resilient and brittle opposites?
- Yes, they are antonyms. Resilient's listed opposites include brittle and fragile; brittle's include resilient and flexible.
- What's the difference between resilient and robust?
- Resilient takes a hit and recovers; robust resists the hit so it barely lands. Brittle is the opposite of both — it cracks and stays cracked.
- What are the noun forms?
- Resilience for resilient; brittleness for brittle.
- Can people be resilient or brittle?
- Resilient is common for people and communities that recover from hardship; 'brittle' is used figuratively for fragile tempers or systems ('a brittle peace').
- How are they used in exams?
- IELTS rewards 'build resilience' and 'a resilient economy'; TOEFL science contrasts brittle and flexible materials. The resilient-versus-brittle pairing is a classic reading contrast.