punctilious - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From punctilio (“fine point in exactness of conduct”) + -ous.
punctilious (comparative more punctilious, superlative most punctilious)
- Strictly attentive to detail; meticulous or fastidious, particularly to codes or conventions.
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:meticulous
With a punctilious slap of the gloves, the duel was now inevitable.
- Precise or scrupulous; finicky or nitpicky.
- Synonyms: finicky, nitpicky, precise; see also Thesaurus:meticulous
2009, Ronnie Cann, Ruth Kempson, Eleni Gregoromichelaki, Semantics: an introduction to meaning in language:
Of course, humans do not treat time in such a punctilious fashion.
2017, Kory Stamper, Word by Word: The Secret Life of Dictionaries, Pantheon Books, page 103:
Every editor at Merriam-Webster deals with the Black Books at many points during their tenure. The Black Books are the in-house set of rules for writing a dictionary (commonly called a style guide) as conceived and written in punctilious detail by the former editor in chief Philip Babcock Gove, for the creation of Webster’s Third.
strictly attentive to detail
- Armenian: բծախնդիր (hy) (bcaxndir), (informal) քթի մազ (hy) (kʻtʻi maz)
- Bulgarian: стриктно спазващ (striktno spazvašt)
- Dutch: minutieus (nl)
- Finnish: pilkuntarkka (fi)
- French: pointilleux (fr)
- German: pedantisch (de), minutiös (de), korrekt (de), förmlich (de), peinlich genau, überkorrekt
- Greek: σχολαστικός (el) (scholastikós)
- Polish: drobiazgowy (pl), formalistyczny (pl), pedantyczny (pl), skrupulatny (pl)
- Russian: щепети́льный (ru) (ščepetílʹnyj), церемо́нный (ru) (ceremónnyj)
- Scottish Gaelic: pongail
- Spanish: puntilloso (es)
- Turkish: aşırı titiz (literally “overcorrect”)
- William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin E[li] Smith, editors (1911), “punctilious”, in The Century Dictionary […], New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., →OCLC.