Acumen

Acumen

Acumen


AK-yoo-men

Definition

(noun) The ability to make quick, smart judgments and decisions; keen insight and shrewdness.

Example

Her financial acumen was evident from the start — within six months of joining the firm, she had identified three inefficiencies that had gone unnoticed for years.

Word Origin

Acumen comes directly from the Latin acumen, meaning “sharpness” or “a point,” derived from acuere — “to sharpen.” The same root gives us acute, acupuncture, and acuity — all words carrying the sense of something pointed, precise, and penetrating. It entered English in the 16th century, originally used to describe mental sharpness before settling into its modern sense of shrewd, practical judgment.

Fun Fact

The Roman orator Cicero was considered the gold standard of acumen in the ancient world — not just for his intellect but for his almost supernatural ability to read a room, anticipate opponents, and make split-second rhetorical decisions under pressure. Julius Caesar, no slouch himself, reportedly studied Cicero’s speeches obsessively. When Cicero was eventually executed on Mark Antony’s orders, Antony’s wife Fulvia is said to have pulled out Cicero’s tongue and stabbed it with her hairpin — a final act of revenge against the sharpest tongue in Rome.

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