出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/03/29 23:21 UTC 版)
The adjective is derived from Late 中期英語 succinte, succynt (“having one’s waist encircled with something, girdled; brief, concise, succinct”), borrowed from Old French succinct (modern French succinct), or directly from its etymon Latin succīnctus (“belted, girdled; enclosed or tightly wrapped; (figurative) concise, succinct; etc.”), the perfect passive participle of succingō (“to gather or tuck up with a belt, etc.”), from suc- (a variant of sub- (prefix meaning ‘under’), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *upó (“from below; up”)) + cingō (“to encircle, surround; to gird”) (further etymology uncertain).
The adverb is derived from the adjective.
succinct (comparative more succinct or (less common) succincter, superlative most succinct or (less common) succinctest)
succinct (comparative more succinct, superlative most succinct)
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