Word of the Day: trenchant

mardi 4 novembre 2014

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for November 05, 2014 is:

trenchant • \TREN-chunt\ • adjective

1 : keen, sharp 2 : vigorously effective and articulate; also : caustic 3 a : sharply perceptive : penetrating b : clear-cut, distinct



Examples:

The daily news satire show not only offers a healthy dose of laughs but also trenchant commentary on the current events of the day.



"Nowhere was hayseed dialect better used to deliver trenchant truths than in 'The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.' Through the voice of an uneducated river-town boy, Mark Twain skewered pretense, pride, and the shameful inhumanity of slavery and racism." — John Yemma, Christian Science Monitor, October 5, 2014



Did you know?

The word trenchant comes from the Anglo-French verb trencher, meaning "to cut," and may ultimately derive from the Vulgar Latin trinicare, meaning "to cut in three." Hence, a trenchant sword is one with a keen edge; a trenchant remark is one that cuts deep; and a trenchant observation is one that cuts to the heart of the matter. Relatives of trenchant in English include the noun trench ("a long ditch cut into the ground") and the verb retrench ("to cut down or pare away" or "to cut down expenses").









Word of the Day: trenchant

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