Word of the Day

: December 18, 2020

idiopathic

play
adjective id-ee-uh-PATH-ik

What It Means

1 : arising spontaneously or from an obscure or unknown cause : primary

2 : peculiar to the individual

idiopathic in Context

"Konnikova is a popular psychology writer…. Her interest was sparked by the unfairness of life—idiopathic illness striking at random, her husband's start-up failing, and so on." — Hermione Eyre, The Spectator, 27 June 2020

"There are a number of reports of individuals who have developed an idiopathic (unexplained) inability to sweat during military and extreme training." — Adam Taylor, The Independent (UK), 19 Nov. 2019


Did You Know?

Idiopathic joins the combining form idio- (from Greek idios, meaning "one's own" or "private") with -pathic, a form that suggests the effects of disease. The combining form idio- is typically found in technical terms. Examples include idiographic, meaning "relating to or dealing with something concrete, individual, or unique"; idiolect, meaning "the language or speech pattern of one individual at a particular period of life"; and idiotype, meaning "the molecular structure and conformation of an antibody that confers its antigenic specificity." A more common idio- word is idiosyncrasy, which most commonly refers to an unusual way in which a person behaves or thinks, or to an unusual part or feature of something.



Word Family Quiz

What member of the idios family can refer to an expression that is peculiar to itself either grammatically or in having a meaning that cannot be understood from the meanings of its separate words?

VIEW THE ANSWER

Podcast


More Words of the Day

Love words? Need even more definitions?

Subscribe to America's largest dictionary and get thousands more definitions and advanced search—ad free!