Apposite

Apposite

Apposite


AP-uh-zit

Definition

(adjective) Apt in the circumstances or in relation to something; strikingly appropriate and relevant

Example

Her apposite analogy cut through the confusion instantly, giving the entire team a framework they could actually use.

Word Origin

Apposite derives from the Latin appositus, the past participle of apponere — from ad (“to”) + ponere (“to put”). The literal sense is “put to” or “placed next to,” suggesting something fitted precisely alongside something else. It entered English in the 17th century as a term for language or argument that fits its context with particular exactness.

Fun Fact

Apposite is itself a word that rewards apposite usage — it carries a quiet precision that makes it slightly self-referential when used well. Rhetoricians have long prized the ability to produce the apposite remark: the perfectly timed observation that reframes a conversation, resolves an argument, or captures a moment so exactly that nothing else could have done it better. Winston Churchill was celebrated for it, as was Abraham Lincoln, whose spare, exact language at Gettysburg is still studied as a masterclass in saying precisely the right thing at precisely the right moment.

Previous Words

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Ubiquitous

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Postulate

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