obtuse
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle French obtus (“obtuse (geometry); narrow-minded, obtuse; boring, dull, lifeless”), from Latin obtūsus (“blunt, dull; obtuse”), past participle of obtundere, from obtundō (“to batter, beat, strike; to blunt, dull”), from ob- (“against”) (see ob-) + tundō (“to beat, strike; to bruise, crush, pound”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *(s)tewd-, from *(s)tew- (“to hit; to push”)). More at obtund.
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obtuse (comparative obtuser or more obtuse, superlative obtusest or most obtuse)
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obtuse (third-person singular simple present obtuses, present participle obtusing, simple past and past participle obtused)
obtuse
obtūse
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