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English Latin Querulous Verb Meaning Ancestor Query April

Querulous describes someone who habitually complains or is fretful and whining. It comes from the Latin 'querulus', derived from the verb 'queri', meaning 'to complain'.

Querulous describe a alguien que se queja habitualmente o que es quejumbroso y lloriqueante. Proviene del latín 'querulus', derivado del verbo 'queri', que significa 'quejarse'.

Word querulous
Date April 27, 2018
Type adjective
Syllables KWAIR-yuh-lus
Etymology English speakers have tagged fearful whiners querulous since late medieval times. The Middle English form of the word, querelose, was an adaptation of the Latin adjective, querulus, which in turn evolved from the Latin verb queri, meaning "to complain." Queri is also an ancestor of the English words quarrel and quarrelsome, but it isn't an ancestor of the noun query (meaning "question"). No need to complain that we're being coy; we're happy to let you know that query descends from the Latin verb quaerere, meaning "to ask."
Examples "… the punch of her performance lies in its sheer nerve; even though her character has our sympathy from the start, she keeps asking for more, tugging at us like a querulous child until our patience cracks." — Anthony Lane, The New Yorker, 24 July 2017

"And while ordinarily, he was not one who was inclined to be querulous, still now on occasion, he could be. He began by asking questions concerning his wife's appearance—irritating little whys which are so trivial and yet so exasperating and discouraging to a woman." — Theodore Dreiser, The Financier, 1912
Definition 1 : habitually complaining
2 : fretful, whining

Tags: wordoftheday::adjective

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