One word each day: Day 10

in wordnerd •  8 years ago  (edited)

There are so many beautiful words in a language, but some just seem to stick with you and they become a favorite.


Source

astute


/əˈstjuːt/

Let's hear it..

What does it mean?

The dictionaries tell us that:

-it means having the ability or showing an ability to accurately assess situations or people and turn this to one's advantage, to observe and understand things clearly , synonym with "shrewd" , "acute" , "clever", "cunning" etc., even "sapient".

Origin

The word comes from obsolete French astute or Latin astutus from astus meaning "craft". I was first used in early 17th century.

The word astute even though is similar in meaning with "shrewd" and "sagacious" , has a different connotation. All three of them imply thinking and sound judgment, but "shrewd" is practical, hardheaded cleverness and judgment, whereas "sagacious" means wisdom and vision combined with good judgment and "astute" is a combination of craft , cleverness, mental sharpness and diplomatic skill.


Sources:
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/astute
https://www.vocabulary.com/dictionary/astute
https://www.youtube.com/


Previous words:

| Day 1 : Concoction | Day 2 : Allure | Day 3 : Clue | Day 4 : Bubble | Day 5 : Dystopia |
| Day 6 : Cornucopia | Day 7 : Dormant | Day 8 : Empirical | Day 9 : Forbidden |


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Spreading your favorite words and some knowledge though steemit. How very astute of you Tiff.

Mhm...astute indeed lol

As in you're quite astute in teaching us all new words...thank you! :)

Thank you :) Glad you like it.

Learned something new today

Yep, astute girl :)

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

Any bugs in your fries yet?