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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for November 24, 2008 is:
reticent \RET-uh-sunt\ adj
1 : inclined to be silent or uncommunicative in speech : reserved
2 : restrained in expression, presentation, or appearance
3 : reluctant
Examples:
Unlike the chatty, gregarious protagonists of his novel, the author is quite reticent in public.
Did you know?
"Reticent" first appeared about 170 years ago, but the "reluctant" sense of "reticent" is a mid-20th century introduction. Though it is now well-established, this newer sense bothers some people, particularly because it has veered away from the word's Latin origins -- "reticent" is from the verb “reticēre,” meaning "to keep silent." But there is some sense in the way the newer meaning developed. We first tended to use the "reluctant" sense of "reticent" when the context was speech (as in "reticent to talk about her past"), thus keeping the word close to its "silent" sense. Eventually, however, exclusive association with speech was abandoned. Now one can be "reticent" to do anything.
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Topics
merriamwebsterlanguageword a daywordsvocabularydictionaryword of the daymerriam-websterenglishword