Truculent

Truculent

Truculent


TRUK-yuh-lunt

Definition

(adjective) Eager to argue or fight; aggressively defiant and quick to confront.

Example

The truculent customer refused every solution the staff offered, seeming more interested in the argument itself than in any actual resolution.

Word Origin

Truculent comes from the Latin truculentus, meaning “fierce” or “savage,” derived from trux meaning “wild” or “cruel.” It entered English in the 16th century, initially describing something literally savage or brutal, before settling into its modern meaning of aggressive confrontational behavior and a hair-trigger readiness to fight or argue.

Fun Fact

The word’s Latin root trux is also the ancestor of the word atrocious — both share a Proto-Indo-European root connected to the idea of something harsh and pitiless. So truculent and atrocious are distant linguistic cousins, which makes a certain sense — truculence taken to its extreme eventually becomes something genuinely atrocious. The shared ancestry is a reminder that aggressive confrontation and cruelty exist on the same spectrum.

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