anecdote

[ˈɛən.ɪkˌdoʊt]

UK: /ˈæn.ɪkˌdəʊt/

ƐƏN · ɪkdoʊt (2 syllables)

English Noun Top 29,577
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Definition

A short account of a real incident or person, often humorous or interesting.

Etymology

Late 17ᵗʰ c., from French anecdote, from Ancient Greek ἀνέκδοτος (anékdotos, “accounts unpublished”), from ἀν- (an-, “not, un-”) + ἔκδοτος (ékdotos, “published”), from ἐκδίδωμι (ekdídōmi, “I publish”), from ἐκ- (ek-, “out”) + δίδωμι (dídōmi, “I give”). Virtually identical cognates in other European languages – French anecdote, German Anekdote, Spanish anécdota, among others.

Example Sentences

  • "tell an anecdote"
  • "relate a short anecdote"
  • "Like all travellers, he is full of anecdote, and has at his command the rarest news of the time. […] Generous, convivial, and full of anecdote, the mercantile agent is a good companion, and his conversation never fails to make glad and jocund the society of that otherwise dullest of places, an English stage coach."
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