- Today's Word
Oblique
oh-BLEEK
Definition
(adjective) Not expressed directly; indirect or evasive; also describes something angled or slanting rather than straight.
Example
Rather than criticizing his boss outright, Marcus made an oblique comment about “leadership styles in general.”
Word Origin
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From Latin obliquus, meaning “slanting, sideways, indirect.” The word entered English in the 15th century through Old French oblique. In its earliest English uses it referred purely to geometry — a line that was neither perpendicular nor parallel. The figurative sense of indirectness followed naturally from that physical slant.
Fun Fact
In military history, the “oblique order” was a famous battlefield tactic — attacking at an angle rather than head-on to concentrate force on one part of an enemy’s line while the rest stood at a distance. Frederick the Great of Prussia used it to devastating effect in the 18th century. The same principle turns up everywhere: negotiators who approach sensitive topics obliquely, writers who reveal character through indirect detail, and diplomats who communicate through implication rather than declaration — all are using the oblique.