Contents |
English
Pronunciation
Etymology
Shortened from acute, originally “keenly perceptive or discerning, shrewd” (1731). Meaning transferred to “pretty, fetching” by US students (slang) c.1834. Meaning drifted further to associate specifically with the pleasing attraction to features usually possessed by infants, mandated by genetics as a survival instinct ensuring a species cares for its young. See Wikipedia: Psychology of cuteness.
Adjective
cute (comparative cuter, superlative cutest)
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Positive cute |
- Possessing physical features, behaviors, personality traits or other properties that are mainly attributed to infants and small or cuddly animals; e.g. fair, dainty, round, and soft physical features, disproportionately large eyes and head, playfulness, fragility, helplessness, curiosity or shyness, innocence, affectionate behavior.
- Our reaction to cute attributes is understood as the way nature ensures mammals care for their young.
- Generally, attractive or pleasing, especially in a youthful, dainty, quaint or fun-spirited way.
- Let's go to the mall and look for cute girls.
- What a cute movie.
- Affected or contrived to charm; mincingly clever; precious; cutesy.
- The actor's performance was too cute for me. All that mugging to the audience killed the humor.
- Don't get cute with me, boy!
- (dated) Mentally keen or discerning; clever; shrewd; see acute.
Derived terms
Italian
Italian Wikipedia has an article on: CuteNoun
cute f. (plural cuti)
Synonyms
Derived terms
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Los Angeles Times
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