Word of the Day
operose \ AH-puh-rohss \ adjective
: tedious, wearisome
EXAMPLES
The operose volume offers up considerably more verbiage than useful information.
"But now competitors face an operose task: it is not enough that they know how to spell a tongue-twister, they should also know its meaning."
"But now competitors face an operose task: it is not enough that they know how to spell a tongue-twister, they should also know its meaning."
— Economic Times, April 16, 2013
DID YOU KNOW?
"Operose" comes from the Latin "operosus" (meaning "laborious," "industrious," or "painstaking"). That word combines the noun "oper-," "opus," which means "work," with "-osus," the Latin equivalent of the English "-ose" and "-ous" suffixes, meaning "full of" or "abounding in."
In its earliest uses, beginning in the mid-1500s, the word was used to describe people who are industrious or painstaking in their efforts. Within a little over 100 years, however, the word was being applied as it more commonly is today: to describe tasks and undertakings requiring much time and effort.
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