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obtuse
[uhb-toos, -tyoos]
adjective
not quick or alert in perception, feeling, or intellect; not sensitive or observant; dull.
Synonyms: dim, slow, boorish, gauche, unobservant, imperceptive, blind, insensitive, tactless, unfeelingnot sharp, acute, or pointed; blunt in form.
(of a leaf, petal, etc.) rounded at the extremity.
indistinctly felt or perceived, as pain or sound.
obtuse
/ əbˈtjuːs /
adjective
mentally slow or emotionally insensitive
maths
(of an angle) lying between 90° and 180°
(of a triangle) having one interior angle greater than 90°
not sharp or pointed
indistinctly felt, heard, etc; dull
obtuse pain
(of a leaf or similar flat part) having a rounded or blunt tip
Other Word Forms
- obtusely adverb
- obtuseness noun
- subobtuse adjective
- subobtusely adverb
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of obtuse1
Example Sentences
I realize that my humor on “Red Eye” was deliberately obtuse in some ways, and not really deliberately.
"I think it would be a bit obtuse of me to speak about signings when clearly we have to improve and do better with what we have," he admitted.
But Schaffer’s film has the uniquely difficult task of making Frank look like an idiot without making the police as a whole seem lovably obtuse.
His last film was the willfully obtuse 2022 French Polynesian political thriller “Pacifiction,” which more often oozed colonial malaise through its painterly landscapes than any narrative.
But Gunn doesn’t do sincerity, so this Superman comes off as obtuse and overwhelmed — which, even for a Julliard-trained actor like Corenswet, is pretty impossible to pull off with any personality.
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