τὸ βαρυκάρδιον

From LSJ

ἡ Νέμεσις προλέγει τῷ πήχεϊ τῷ τε χαλινῷ μήτ' ἄμετρόν τι ποιεῖν μήτ' ἀχάλινα λέγειν → Nemesis warns us by her cubit-rule and bridle neither to do anything without measure nor to be unbridled in our speech

Source

Spanish

obstinación

Translations

obstinacy

Arabic: عِنَاد‎; Armenian: կամակորություն; Azerbaijani: inadkarlıq; Belarusian: упартасць; Bulgarian: упоритост, инат; Catalan: obstinació; Chinese Mandarin: 頑固, 顽固; Czech: tvrdohlavost; Esperanto: obstineco, obstino; Finnish: itsepäisyys, itsepintaisuus; French: entêtement, obstination; Galician: teima, teimosía, touñada, piturra, gurra, tercura; German: Sturheit, Eigensinn; Greek: πείσμα, ισχυρογνωμοσύνη, γινάτι; Ancient Greek: ἀτροπία, αὐθάδεια, αὐθαδία, αὐθαδίσματα, ἰσχυρογνωμοσύνη, σκληραυχενία, σκληρία, σκληροκαρδία, σκληρότης, στερέωσις, τὸ ἀτειρές, τὸ βαρυκάρδιον, τὸ δυσκίνητον, τὸ σκληρόστομον, ὑπομονή; Hungarian: csökönyösség; Italian: testardaggine, ostinazione; Japanese: 頑固, 意地; Korean: 완고; Latin: obstinatio; Macedonian: твр́доглавост, своеглавост, упорност, инает, инат; Persian: لجاجت‎, معاندت‎, عناد‎‎; Plautdietsch: Ieejensenn; Polish: upartość, upór; Portuguese: obstinação; Romanian: încăpățânare, obstinație; Russian: упрямство, упорство, твердолобость, упёртость; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: тврдо̀главо̄ст, упорно̄ст; Roman: tvrdòglavōst, upórnōst; Slovak: tvrdohlavosť; Slovene: trmoglavost, trma; Spanish: testarudez, porfía, terquedad, obstinación; Tajik: якравӣ, саркашӣ, инод, қайсарӣ; Turkish: inatçılık, inat; Ukrainian: упертість; Uzbek: oʻjarlik, qaysarlik, sarkashlik; Vietnamese: sự ngoan cố, sự cố chấp