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“pundit”
1. Someone who makes comments or judgments; especially, in an authoritative manner; a critic or a commentator: The elected minister presented himself as a pundit about all areas of environmental conservation.
2. People who know a great deal about particular subjects and who express their ideas and opinions about those topics publicly; such as, by speaking on television and/or radio programs: The governor and his colleagues often appeared on television as pundits regarding water front development and its prospects for greater tax income.
3. A learned person, an expert, or an authority: The chairperson of the Religion Department at the university was considered a pundit on the topic of South Asian religions.
4. Etymology: from Hindi pandit from Sanskrit pandita, "learned, well informed".
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2. People who know a great deal about particular subjects and who express their ideas and opinions about those topics publicly; such as, by speaking on television and/or radio programs: The governor and his colleagues often appeared on television as pundits regarding water front development and its prospects for greater tax income.
3. A learned person, an expert, or an authority: The chairperson of the Religion Department at the university was considered a pundit on the topic of South Asian religions.
4. Etymology: from Hindi pandit from Sanskrit pandita, "learned, well informed".
Go to this Word A Day Revisited Index
so you can see more of Mickey Bach's cartoons.
This entry is located in the following unit:
English Words in Action, Group P
(page 5)
An expert who knows a great deal about certain subjects and who makes statements; especially, in an authoritative way. (1)
This entry is located in the following unit:
Word a Day Revisited Index of Cartoons Illustrating the Meanings of Words
(page 66)