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Prudent Meaning Middle English Shrewd Water Adjective Proo Dunt

The flashcard defines 'prudent' as an adjective meaning marked by wisdom, judiciousness, or shrewdness in practical affairs; also, cautious or discreet. It traces back to the Latin 'providere,' meaning 'to see ahead.'

The flashcard defines 'prudent' as an adjective meaning marked by wisdom, judiciousness, or shrewdness in practical affairs; also, cautious or discreet. It traces back to the Latin 'providere,' meaning 'to see ahead.'

Word prudent
Date May 19, 2015
Type adjective
Syllables PROO-dunt
Etymology Prudent arrived in Middle English around the 14th century and traces back, by way of Middle French, to the Latin verb providēre, meaning "to see ahead, foresee, provide (for)." One who is prudent literally has the foresight to make sound or shrewd decisions. Providēre combines pro-, meaning "before," and vidēre, meaning "to see," and it may look familiar to you; it is also the source of our words provide, provident, provision, and improvise. Vidēre also has many English offspring, including evident, supervise, video, and vision.
Examples The couple's financial advisor helped them devise a prudent investment strategy.

"As a group, they tend not to be water wasters. Wasting water costs them money in the form of pumping groundwater needlessly. Farmers are more prudent than that." - Dennis L. Taylor, The Californian (Salinas, California), April 5, 2015
Definition 1 : marked by wisdom or judiciousness
2 : shrewd in the management of practical affairs
3 : cautious, discreet
4 : thrifty, frugal

Tags: wordoftheday::adjective

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