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🗓️ 19 February 2025
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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for February 19, 2025 is:
obtuse • \ahb-TOOSS\ • adjective
Obtuse is a formal word that describes someone who is not able to think clearly or to understand what is obvious or simple. It can also suggest a refusal to see something apparent to others, or a willful ignorance of or insensitivity to the real facts of a situation. Obtuse can also describe something that is difficult to understand because it is unclear or imprecise.
// They were too obtuse to take a hint.
// The text is poorly written and downright obtuse.
Examples:
“Engineers love complicated problems, but we have a reputation for being obtuse about personal interactions. I often tell my fellow engineers, ‘You won't find any problems more complicated than those involving people.’” — Bill Austin, Inc.com, 15 Jan. 2025
Did you know?
There’s a lot to understand about obtuse, so we’ll get straight to the point. Obtuse comes from a Latin word, obtusus, meaning “dull” or “blunt.” It can describe a geometric angle that is not acute (in other words one that exceeds 90 degrees but is less than 180 degrees), a leaf that is rounded at its free end, or a person who isn’t thinking clearly or who otherwise refuses to see something apparent to others—if someone asks you if you’re being obtuse about something, they are not paying you a compliment. Another common sense (no pun intended) of obtuse related to apprehension is “hard to comprehend,” often applied to speech or writing that isn’t clearly expressed or thought out. This sense may have developed due to the influence of two similar-sounding words: abstruse, a formal word that also means “hard to comprehend,” and obscure, a word that can mean, among other things, “not readily understood or clearly expressed.”
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0:00.0 | It's the word of the day for February 19th. |
0:11.5 | Today's word is obtuse spelled O-B-T-U-S-E. |
0:16.4 | Abtuce is an adjective. |
0:17.9 | It's a formal word that describes someone who is not able to think clearly |
0:22.0 | or to understand what is obvious or simple. It can also suggest a refusal to see something |
0:28.2 | apparent to others, or a willful ignorance of, or insensitivity to the real facts of a situation. |
0:35.1 | Obtuce can also describe something that is difficult to understand |
0:38.7 | because it is unclear or imprecise. Here's the word used in a sentence from ink.com by Bill Austin. |
0:47.3 | Engineers love complicated problems, but we have a reputation for being obtuse about personal |
0:52.5 | interactions. I often tell my fellow engineers, |
0:55.9 | you won't find any problems more complicated than those involving people. There's a lot to |
1:02.3 | understand about the word obtuse, so we'll get straight to the point. Abtuce comes from a Latin word |
1:08.3 | obtusus, meaning dull or blunt. It can describe a geometric angle |
1:13.0 | that is not acute, in other words, one that exceeds 90 degrees but is less than 180 degrees, |
1:20.0 | a leaf that is rounded at its free end, or a person who isn't thinking clearly or who |
1:25.9 | otherwise refuses to see something apparent to others. |
1:30.2 | If someone asks you if you're being obtuse about something, they are not paying you a compliment. |
1:36.2 | Another common sense, no pun intended, of the word obtuse, related to apprehension is hard to comprehend, |
1:43.3 | often applied to speech or writing that isn't |
1:45.7 | clearly expressed or thought out. This sense may have developed due to the influence of two |
1:51.1 | similar sounding words, abstruse, a formal word that also means hard to comprehend, and obscure, |
1:58.4 | a word that can mean, among other things, not readily understood or clearly expressed. |
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