Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    Cap·tious
    /ˈkapSHəs/

    adjective

    • 1. (of a person) tending to find fault or raise petty objections: formal "a captious teacher"
  2. Captious means inclined to find faults and raise objections, often on trivial grounds. Learn more about its synonyms, usage, history, and origin from Merriam-Webster dictionary.

  3. Captious means apt to notice and make much of trivial faults or defects, or designed to ensnare or perplex. Learn the origin, usage, and related words of captious from Dictionary.com.

  4. Captious means often expressing criticisms about matters that are not important. Learn how to use this formal adjective with examples from literature and translations in Chinese.

  5. Captious is an adjective that means often expressing criticisms about matters that are not important. Learn how to use it in a sentence, see synonyms and related words, and find translations in different languages.

  6. When a person is described as captious, the sense is usually of nitpicking at faults or raising petty objections. It is usually used to imply a permanent character or personality flaw, as opposed to a momentary lapse in understanding.

  7. 3 days ago · Captious means apt to make trivial criticisms or faultfinding, or designed to ensnare or perplex. Learn the word origin, derived forms and usage examples from Collins Dictionary.

  8. Captious is an adjective that means easily offended or inclined to find fault. It comes from French or Latin and is not very common in modern English. See examples, pronunciation, and related words.

  1. People also search for