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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
strive
verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
always
▪ We always strove to get a solution that was acceptable all round.
▪ Artists in this tradition have always striven to celebrate the present by prolonging it into the future.
▪ This is the nature of sciences and pseudo-sciences, always striving for a set of rules and final solutions.
constantly
▪ Governments are constantly striving to create equality thus avoiding conflict and hardship such as this Court ruling has done.
▪ Moreover, the struggling organization should strive constantly to legitimize its policies and procedures, and the decisions and beliefs behind them.
▪ In this way the film strives constantly to dispossess the characters.
▪ Equilibrium is a necessary condition toward which the organism constantly strives.
▪ We are constantly striving to improve and to do this, we need to know what you think.
▪ Commitment to the health service means constantly striving for better ways forward.
▪ Since those early days, telecommunications Companies have been striving constantly to make the network intelligent once again.
▪ A charity such as ours must constantly strive for greater efficiency, to put every penny of your subscription to good use.
for
▪ It defines what is important, worthwhile and worth striving for.
▪ Within their own group there was little to strive for since there were no clearly identifiable roles available.
■ NOUN
customer
▪ Indeed the Customer Service Charter featured below sets out the level of service we strive to sustain.
▪ So while businesses strive to please customers, government agencies strive to please interest groups.
▪ He strives to please his customers.
government
▪ Here and elsewhere, the government strove to identify itself with new themes.
▪ So while businesses strive to please customers, government agencies strive to please interest groups.
man
▪ I was now just impersonally a man, striving against the elements.
▪ He said a man strives, a woman maintains.
▪ In most societies men strive to be polygamists but few succeed.
people
▪ We also see many people striving to improve these conditions.
▪ The Hebrew people did not strive to read and write in order to decipher technical instructions.
▪ There was much activity at Brooklands as people strove to get ready for their attempts.
▪ On the contrary, this book is for people who strive to do that.
▪ Here were young people striving for the noblest ideals.
▪ The province of the mind. People strove to be free of Nature, seeing it as something outside of themselves.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ The company must constantly strive for greater efficiency.
▪ Toni has been striving to achieve musical recognition for the past ten years.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Even when the judicial structure does strive to maintain some political independence, it still might respond to political pressure.
▪ Indeed the Customer Service Charter featured below sets out the level of service we strive to sustain.
▪ It defines what is important, worthwhile and worth striving for.
▪ She strove daily to be the perfect wife.
▪ The film strives for a surface kind of cynicism, only to invoke the Love Conquers All escape clause in the end.
▪ The many affirmations are either on what the self or others should strive for-to do or to become.
▪ They commit themselves to strive for its elimination.
▪ Which - she strove to be positive - left her the whole day in which to take her ease in Mariánské Láznë.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Strive

Strive \Strive\, n.

  1. An effort; a striving. [R.]
    --Chapman.

  2. Strife; contention. [Obs.]
    --Wyclif (luke xxi. 9).

Strive

Strive \Strive\, v. i. [imp. Strove; p. p. Striven(Rarely, Strove); p. pr. & vb. n. Striving.] [OF. estriver; of Teutonic origin, and akin to G. streben, D. streven, Dan. str[ae]be, Sw. str["a]fva. Cf. Strife.]

  1. To make efforts; to use exertions; to endeavor with earnestness; to labor hard.

    Was for this his ambition strove To equal C[ae]sar first, and after, Jove?
    --Cowley.

  2. To struggle in opposition; to be in contention or dispute; to contend; to contest; -- followed by against or with before the person or thing opposed; as, strive against temptation; strive for the truth.
    --Chaucer.

    My Spirit shall not always strive with man.
    --Gen. vi.

  3. Why dost thou strive against him?
    --Job xxxiii. 13.

    Now private pity strove with public hate, Reason with rage, and eloquence with fate.
    --Denham.

    3. To vie; to compete; to be a rival.
    --Chaucer.

    [Not] that sweet grove Of Daphne, by Orontes and the inspired Castalian spring, might with this paradise Of Eden strive.
    --Milton.

    Syn: To contend; vie; struggle; endeavor; aim.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
strive

c.1200, "quarrel, contend," from Old French estriver "to quarrel, dispute, resist, struggle, put up a fight, compete," from estrif, estrit "quarrel" (see strife). It became a strong verb (past tense strove) by rhyming association with drive, dive, etc. Meaning "try hard" is from early 14c. Related: Striving.

Wiktionary
strive

n. 1 (context obsolete English) An effort; a striving. 2 (context obsolete English) strife; contention vb. 1 To try to achieve a result; to make strenuous effort; to try earnestly and persistently. 2 To struggle in opposition; to be in contention or dispute; to contend; to contest. 3 To vie; to compete as a rival.

WordNet
strive
  1. v. attempt by employing effort; "we endeavor to make our customers happy" [syn: endeavor, endeavour]

  2. to exert much effort or energy; "straining our ears to hear" [syn: reach, strain]

  3. [also: strove, striven]

Usage examples of "strive".

Decimus, a selfmade man who had built his wealth, strove now to right what his own affluence had wrought upon his children.

In short, Anarchism strives towards a social organization which will establish well-being for all.

Potentiality may be thought of as a Substratum to states and shapes--and forms which are to be received, which it welcomes by its nature and even strives for--sometimes in gain but sometimes, also, to loss, to the annulling of some distinctive manner of Being already actually achieved.

Her mud stupidities, as well as the frequent gaucheries which seemed to bother others, he thought of as merely amusing-perhaps because he grew tired at times of being surrounded by clever, vigilant minds, forever striving to match the astuteness of his own.

At that time, if one does not continue striving to enhance the power of attentional vividness, one may fall into a complacent, pseudo-meditative trance, which may result in dementia.

Lady Bellamy, the heart that can remember it can also strive to reach another like it.

Yet, in spite of this intimacy, I continued to look upon it as my bounden duty to keep the Nechludoffs in general, and Varenika in particular, in ignorance of my true feelings and tastes, and strove always to appear altogether another young man than what I really was--to appear, indeed, such a young man as could never possibly have existed.

The Bravo rushed towards those fissures in the venerable but polluted pile he had already striven to open, and with frantic force he endeavored to widen them with his hands.

Above all, let us strive to disengage ourselves from homogeneous space, this substratum of fixity, this arbitrary scheme of measurement and division, which, to our greater advantage, subtends the natural, qualitative, and undivided extension of images.

It was a time when Americans were striving to make up for the privations of war, but Meany took it upon himself to explain to workers the need for sacrifice.

I entered the carceral system at the age of fifteen, my parents having concluded that a night or two spent in the county lock-up might address my aggressive tendencies, I strived to present a sturdy, unglamorous presence among the mesomorphs, the skin artists and the flamboyantly hirsute.

Nothing in my experience intimated that such men now or ever had existed as other than a fiction, yet they embodied a principle of anonymity that spoke to my sense of style, and so when I entered the carceral system at the age of fifteen, my parents having concluded that a night or two spent in the county lock-up might address my aggressive tendencies, I strived to present a sturdy, unglamorous presence among the mesomorphs, the skin artists and the flamboyantly hirsute.

Or, to make an end, it is millenarianism, the theory that the world is going to blow up tomorrow, or the day after, or two weeks hence, and that all sweating and striving are thus useless.

Him misconceive, suppose this Caliban strives hard and ails no less, would you have him hurt?

She musta caught the vibration that under all that muscle and power there was what they call the true blue, the clean thoughts and the honest striving and so forth.