concise

concise
concisely, adv.
/keuhn suys"/, adj.
expressing or covering much in few words; brief in form but comprehensive in scope; succinct; terse: a concise explanation of the company's retirement plan.
[1580-90; < L concisus cut short (ptp. of concidere), equiv. to con- CON- + -cid- (comb. form of caedere to cut) + -tus ptp. ending]
Syn. pithy, compendious, laconic. CONCISE, SUCCINCT, TERSE all refer to speech or writing that uses few words to say much. CONCISE usually implies that unnecessary details or verbiage have been eliminated from a more wordy statement: a concise summary of the speech. SUCCINCT, on the other hand, implies that the message is as originally composed and is expressed in as few words as possible: a succinct statement of the problem. TERSE sometimes suggests brevity combined with wit or polish to produce particularly effective expression: a terse, almost aphoristic, style. It may also suggest brusqueness or curtness: a terse reply that was almost rude.

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • concise — concise, terse, succinct, laconic, summary, pithy, compendious are comparable when meaning briefly stated or presented or given to or manifesting brevity in statement or expression. A person is concise who speaks or writes briefly ; a thing is… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • Concise — Con*cise , a. [L. concisus cut off, short, p. p. of concidere to cut to pieces; con + caedere to cut; perh. akin to scindere to cleave, and to E. shed, v. t.; cf. F. concis.] Expressing much in a few words; condensed; brief and compacted; used of …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • concise — [kən sīs′] adj. [L concisus, cut off, brief, pp. of concidere, to cut off < com , intens. + caedere, to cut: see CIDE] brief and to the point; short and clear concisely adv. conciseness n. SYN. CONCISE implies the stating of much in few words …   English World dictionary

  • concise — I adjective abbreviated, abridged, abstracted, brief, capsule, capsulized, compact, compacted, compendious, compressed, condensed, contracted, curtailed, curtate, epigrammatic, epitomized, laconic, pithy, short, shortened, succinct, summarized,… …   Law dictionary

  • concise — 1580s, from L. concisus cut off, brief, pp. of concidere to cut off, cut up, cut through, cut to pieces, from com , intensive prefix (see COM (Cf. com )), + caedere to cut (see CIDE (Cf. cide)) …   Etymology dictionary

  • CONCISE —   Concise Networks Central Information Service for Europe, part of the COSINE project …   Glossary of the European Union and European Communities

  • concise — [adj] short, to the point abridged, boiled down*, breviloquent, brief, compact, compendiary, compendious, compressed, condensed, curt, epigrammatic, in a nutshell*, laconic, lean, marrowy, meaty, pithy, short and sweet*, succinct, summary,… …   New thesaurus

  • concise — ► ADJECTIVE ▪ giving a lot of information clearly and in few words. DERIVATIVES concisely adverb conciseness noun concision noun. ORIGIN Latin concisus cut up, cut down …   English terms dictionary

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