0 completely unwilling to change a decision, opinion, demand, etc.:
1 rigid (= not able to be bent or moved)
2 not giving up control or responsibility for (something) as a result of influence or persuasion:
Other evils, especially those fashioned by human hands, demand our condemnation, unyielding opposition, and vigorous efforts at prevention and reparation.
Loanwords are also evidence of how speech communities interacted with a physical environment that was ancient to some, unfamiliar to others, and unyielding to all.
They should simply go on organising the masses, pressing for social reform, and remain true to their unyielding opposition.
Although these antagonisms were real enough, they were not necessarily, in contrast to existing historical interpretations, of an enduring and unyielding nature.
There is, perhaps, useful corrective in this perspective to the polemical overkill which characterises the" totalitarian" school at its most unyielding.
Only within the scaffolding of these truths, only on the firm foundation of unyielding despair, can the soul's habitation henceforth be safely built.
In neither case would it be fair to infer that an unyielding posture belies moral rigidity.
The soft, sinuous sofa rebuked the straight, unyielding, noisy gadgets of the machine age.