- Today's Word
Knotty
NOT-ee
Definition
(adjective) Full of knots; or, figuratively, extremely difficult and complex, with no straightforward solution.
Example
The lawyers spent weeks untangling the knotty language buried deep in the old property deed.
Word Origin
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From Old English cnotta (“knot”) + -ig (adjectival suffix), making the literal meaning simply “full of knots.” The figurative use — meaning intellectually complex or hard to resolve — developed naturally from the physical metaphor of a rope or thread so tangled it cannot be easily undone. The word has been used in its figurative sense since at least the 16th century.
Fun Fact
The original “knotty problem” in Western history may be the Gordian Knot — a legendarily complex knot tied to a cart in the city of Gordium, prophesied to be undone only by the future ruler of Asia. When Alexander the Great encountered it in 333 BCE, he reportedly cut right through it with his sword, giving us the phrase “cutting the Gordian Knot” — solving a knotty problem not by untangling it but by reframing the rules entirely. Modern business and political strategy still reference this move whenever someone sidesteps a complex problem by changing the terms of engagement altogether.