wit
1 (wĭt)
[Middle English, from Old English.]
noun
- The natural ability to perceive and understand; intelligence.
- Keenness and quickness of perception or discernment; ingenuity. Often used in the plural: living by one's wits.
- wits. Sound mental faculties; sanity: scared out of my wits.
- The ability to perceive and express in an ingeniously humorous manner the relationship between seemingly incongruous or disparate things.
- One noted for this ability, especially one skilled in repartee.
- A person of exceptional intelligence.
idioms
- at (one's) wits' end
- At the limit of one's mental resources; utterly at a loss.
- have (one's) wits about (one)
- To remain alert or calm, especially in a crisis.
synonyms:
wit1humor, repartee, sarcasm, irony These nouns denote forms of expression that elicit amusement or laughter. Wit implies intellectual keenness and the ability to perceive and express in a diverting way analogies between dissimilar things: “Wit has truth in it; wisecracking is simply calisthenics with words” (Dorothy Parker) Humor suggests the faculty of recognizing what is amusing, comical, incongruous, or absurd: “Man's sense of humor seems to be in inverse proportion to the gravity of his profession” (Mary Roberts Rinehart) Repartee implies a facility for answering swiftly and cleverly: “framing comments … that would be sure to sting and yet leave no opening for repartee” (H.G. Wells) Sarcasm is a form of caustic wit intended to wound or ridicule another: “tone seemed as if meant to be kind and soothing, but yet had a bitterness of sarcasm in it” (Nathaniel Hawthorne) Irony is a form of expression in which an intended meaning is the opposite of the literal meaning of the words used: “A drayman in a passion calls out, ‘You are a pretty fellow,’ without suspecting that he is uttering irony” (Thomas Macaulay)- See also: mind
wit
2 (wĭt)
[Middle English, from Old English witan.]
verb: wist (wĭst), wit·ting (wĭt́ĭng) first and third person singular present tense, wot (wŏt)
Archaictransitive verb
- To be or become aware of; learn.
intransitive verb
- To know.
idioms
- to wit
- That is to say; namely.