acrimonious

English dictionary entry

Meanings

adj
  1. Harsh and sharp, or bitter and not pleasant to the taste; acrid, pungent.
  2. Angry, acid, and sharp in delivering argumentative replies: bitter, mean-spirited, sharp in language or tone.

Pronunciation

/ˌæk.ɹɪˈməʊ.nɪ.əs/ /ˌæk.ɹɪˈmoʊ.ni.əs/ /-ɹə-/ en-au-acrimonious.ogg

Word forms

acrimonious more acrimonious most acrimonious

Etymology

From acrimony + -ous; compare French acrimonieux (“acrimonious”), from Latin ācrimōniōsus (“acrimonious”), from ācrimōnia (“pungency, sharpness; acrimony, austerity”) + -ōsus (suffix meaning “full of; prone to”, forming adjectives from nouns) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *-went- or *-wont- + *-to-). Ācrimōnia is derived from Latin ācer (“sharp; bitter, sour”) (from Proto-Indo-European *h₂eḱrós (“sharp”), from *h₂eḱ- (“sharp”) + *-rós (suffix forming adjectives from Caland system roots)) + Latin -mōnia (the feminine form of -mōnium (suffix forming collective nouns and nouns designating legal status or obligation), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *-mō (suffix forming agent nouns from verbs)).

This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.