Caustic

Caustic

Caustic


KAW-stik

Definition

(adjective) Sharply sarcastic or cutting in a way that is meant to wound; also, capable of burning or corroding organic tissue through chemical action

Example

Her caustic remarks during the meeting left everyone uncomfortable and the presenter visibly shaken.

Word Origin

Caustic comes from the Latin causticus, derived from the Greek kaustikos — from kaiein, meaning “to burn.” It entered English in the late 14th century first in its literal chemical sense, describing substances that burn or corrode on contact, before its meaning extended to describe the burning quality of sharp, cutting speech.

Fun Fact

Some of history’s most celebrated wits were known for their caustic tongues. Oscar Wilde, Mark Twain, and Dorothy Parker built entire reputations on caustic humor — remarks so sharp they drew blood while making the room laugh. Parker famously quipped about a Yale prom that the girls were “all ravishing in their beauty” with a follow-up so cutting it became legendary. In chemistry, caustic soda (sodium hydroxide) is still one of the most widely used industrial compounds in the world — found in everything from soap-making to paper production — a reminder that the word’s literal burn is just as real as its rhetorical one.

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