Captious describes someone prone to stressing faults and raising objections, or a question designed to confuse.
Captious describes someone prone to stressing faults and raising objections, or a question designed to confuse.
Word | captious |
---|---|
Date | February 26, 2015 |
Type | adjective |
Syllables | KAP-shuss |
Etymology | If you suspect that captious is a relative of capture and captivate, you're right. All of those words are related to the Latin verb capere, which means "to take." The direct ancestor of captious is captio, a Latin offspring of capere, which literally means "a taking" but which was also used to mean "a deception" or "a sophistic argument." Arguments labeled "captious" are likely to capture you in a figurative sense; they often entrap through subtly deceptive reasoning or trifling points. A captious individual is one who you might also dub "hypercritical," the sort of carping, censorious critic only too ready to point out minor faults or raise objections on trivial grounds. |
Examples | Befuddled by the captious question, the suspect broke down and confessed to the crime. "During the past 15 years Mr. Maxwell has established himself as one of the few sui generis voices in experimental theater, and like all truly original talents, he has been subject to varied and captious interpretations." - Ben Brantley, New York Times, October 24, 2012 |
Definition | 1 : marked by an often ill-natured inclination to stress faults and raise objections 2 : calculated to confuse, entrap, or entangle in argument |
Tags: wordoftheday::adjective
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