English edit

Etymology edit

anti- +‎ strong

Adjective edit

antistrong (not comparable)

  1. Opposed to strength in
    • 1969, United States Congress House Foreign Affairs, Strategy and science:
      How does a Senator insist on the quality of equipment, and you mentioned that, at the Pentagon without being interpreted as antistrong national defense?
    • 2008, Alexei Trochev, Judging Russia: The Role of the Constitutional Court in Russian Politics 1990-2006, →ISBN, page 72:
      To sum up, the dynamics of a "tug-of-war" between the supporters and opponents of the powerful and independent constitutional court dispel the traditional version of judicial empowerment as a struggle between “prostrong Court” reformers and “antistrong Court” reactionaries.
    • 2011, Michele Bachmann, Core of Conviction: My Story, →ISBN:
      I realized I wasn't in line with the new antifamily, antistrong national defense, antifiscal sanity Democratic Party.
  2. (mathematics) Containing an antidirected (x, y)-trail starting and ending with a forward arc for every choice of x and y.
    • 2016, Jorgen Bang-Jensen, Stephane Bessy, Bill Jackson, Matthias Kriesell, “Antistrong digraphs”, in arXiv[1]:
      Finally, we study arc-decompositions of antistrong digraphs and pose several problems and conjectures.