couth

English dictionary entry

Meanings

adj
  1. Familiar, known; well-known, renowned.
  2. Variant of couthie.
  3. Agreeable, friendly, pleasant.
  4. Comfortable; cosy, snug.
adj
  1. Marked by or possessing a high degree of sophistication; cultured, refined.
noun
  1. Social grace, refinement, sophistication; etiquette, manners.
  2. A person with social graces; a refined or sophisticated person.

Pronunciation

/ˈkuːθ/ [ˈkʰʊu̯θ] en-us-couth.ogg

Word forms

couth more couth most couth couths

Etymology

From Middle English couth (“familiar, known; evident, true; famous, respected, well-known; genteel, having good manners”), from Old English cūþ (“familiar, intimate, known, usual; certain, plain, manifest; famous, noted, well-known; excellent; friendly; related”), past participle of cunnan (“to be familiar with, know; can, to be able, know how”), from Proto-Germanic *kunnaną (“to be familiar with, know, recognize; to be able, know how”) (compare *kunþaz (“known”)), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *ǵneh₃- (“to know”). The word is cognate with Dutch kond (“known”), Saterland Frisian cut (“known”), Gothic 𐌺𐌿𐌽𐌸𐍃 (kunþs, “known”), Icelandic kuður, kunnur (“known”), Latin gnosco (“to know”), Old High German kund, chund, chunt, Middle High German kunt (modern German kund (“known”)), Old Saxon kūth, cûth, cuð (“known; famous, renowned”), Scots couth (“familiar, known”); and is a doublet of could.

Antonyms

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