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scrupulous

scrupulous

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day · Merriam-Webster

September 5, 20171m 41s

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Show Notes

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for September 5, 2017 is:


scrupulous \SKROO-pyuh-lus\ adjective

1 : having moral integrity : acting in strict regard for what is considered right or proper

2 : punctiliously exact : painstaking


Examples:

"As a child, I somehow absorbed the idea that getting in the way of other people or wasting their time was a terrible offense. I have been scrupulous about standing to the right on escalators, not blocking aisles, not showing up late." — Rebecca Solnit, Harper's, July 2017

"Don't do business on the side with an elected official who can benefit your clients by lowering their property assessments. But if you do, be absolutely scrupulous about filling out every disclosure form. Or you'll look like you're trying to hide something—and maybe you are." — The Chicago Sun-Times, 27 July 2017


Did you know?

Scrupulous and its close relative scruple ("an ethical consideration or principle") come from the Latin noun scrupulus, the diminutive of scrupus. Scrupus refers to a sharp stone, so scrupulus means "a small sharp stone." Scrupus retained its literal meaning but eventually also came to be used with the metaphorical meaning "a source of anxiety or uneasiness," the way a sharp pebble in one's shoe would be a source of pain. When the adjective scrupulous entered the language, it meant "principled," but now it also commonly means "painstaking" or "careful."

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Topics

WORDWORDSWEBSTERWORD A DAYVOCABULARYENGLISHDICTIONARYMERRIAMLANGUAGEMERRIAM-WEBSTERWORD OF THE DAY