Make Your Point > Archived Issues > MORDANT
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Mordant wit tends to be the darkest kind of sarcastic: the biting, cutting, scathing, s_rd__ic kind.
"Mordant" traces back through French to the Latin mordēre, "to bite or sting, or to cause pain."
Part of speech:
"Mordant" is a very formal word. It's semi-common: just rare enough to catch your reader's attention, but common enough to be easily understood. Pick it when you want to call extra attention to how something is sharp, bitter, and even sinister.
"He turned his experience into this tight little book, mordantly funny from the first sentence: 'I have a good poker face because I am half dead inside.'"
Explain the meaning of "mordant" without saying "keenly cutting" or "very dark."
Fill in the blanks: "(Some dark article, show, poem, book, song, work of art, or other creation) is a mordant commentary on (some social issue or problem)."
Try to spend 20 seconds or more on the game below. Don’t skip straight to the review—first, let your working memory empty out.
1.
Opposites of MORDANT include
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