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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

fastidious

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

Merriam-Webster

Arts, Literature, Language Courses, Education

4.31.2K Ratings

🗓️ 19 April 2025

⏱️ 2 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for April 19, 2025 is:

fastidious • \fass-TID-ee-us\  • adjective

Someone described as fastidious is extremely or overly careful about how they do something. Fastidious may also describe someone who is difficult to please, or someone who always wants to be clean, neat, etc.

// Our parents taught us to be fastidious in keeping our rooms clean, making sure to dust every surface and sweep out every corner.

// He's a fastidious dresser whose fashion choices seem to anticipate the newest trends.

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Examples:

"Becoming Led Zeppelin, filmmaker Bernard MacMahon's new documentary about the band, certainly succeeds at taking Led Zeppelin seriously, in ways that might disappoint some viewers but that I found both compelling and refreshing. Becoming Led Zeppelin doesn't hide that it's an authorized biopic … but the film is so fastidious and detail-oriented that it never feels like hagiography." — Jack Hamilton, Slate, 11 Feb. 2025

Did you know?

If you presume that the adjective fastidious bears some relation to fast, not so fast. Fastidious comes from Latin fastidium, meaning "aversion" or "disgust." Fastidium is believed to be a combination of fastus, meaning "arrogance," and taedium, "irksomeness" or "disgust." (Taedium is also the source of tedium and tedious.) In keeping with its Latin roots, fastidious once meant "haughty," "disgusting," and "disagreeable," but the word is now most often applied to people who are very meticulous or overly difficult to please, or to work which reflects a demanding or precise attitude. Our own fastidiousness requires us to point out that the familiar adjective fast comes not from Latin, but from Old English.



Transcript

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0:00.0

It's the word of the day for April 19th.

0:11.4

Today's word is fastidious, spelled F-A-S-T-I-O-U-S. Fistidious is an adjective.

0:24.3

Someone described as fastidious is extremely or overly careful about how they do something. Festidious may also describe someone who is difficult to please or

0:30.1

someone who always wants to be clean or neat. Here's the word used in a sentence from Slate by

0:35.3

Jack Hamilton. Becoming Led Zeppelin,

0:38.3

filmmaker Bernard McMahon's new documentary about the band

0:42.3

certainly succeeds at taking Led Zeppelin seriously

0:45.3

in ways that might disappoint some viewers,

0:48.3

but that I found both compelling and refreshing.

0:50.3

Becoming Led Zeppelin doesn't hide that it's an authorized biopic, but the film is

0:56.0

so fastidious and detail-oriented that it never feels like hagiography.

1:01.0

If you presume that the adjective fastidious bears some relation to the word fast, not so fast.

1:08.0

Festidious comes from the Latin word fastidium, meaning aversion or disgust.

1:14.2

Festidium is believed to be a combination of fastus, meaning arrogance, and tedium, irksomeness, or disgust.

1:22.5

Tedium is also the source of our English words, tedium and tedious.

1:27.4

In keeping with its Latin roots,

1:29.7

fastidious once meant haughty, disgusting, and disagreeable, but the word is now most often applied

1:35.5

to people who are very meticulous or overly difficult to please, or to work which reflects

1:41.6

a demanding or precise attitude. Our own fastidiousness requires us to point out that the familiar adjective,

1:49.0

fast, comes not from Latin, but from Old English.

1:52.6

With your word of the day, I'm Peter Sokolowski.

1:57.9

Visit Miriamwebster.com today for definitions, wordplay, and trending word lookups.

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