jejune

jejune
adjective /dʒəˈdʒuːn,dʒiˈdʒuːn/
a) Not nutritious.

, 1702: I have often wondered why some late Writers should sensure Tullys Letters for being too naked and jejune, when that to his Friend Lucceius, which the Reader will find in this Collection, is a plain Demonstration to the contrary? Thomas Brown, Select Epistles or Letters out of M. Tullius Cicero; and the best Roman, Greek and French Authors both Ancient and Modern

b) Lacking matter; empty; devoid of substance.

, 1917: This renders the recognition of alternatives a paramount necessity for a logic of discovery, which can no longer dismiss them with a jejune chapter on disjunctive propositions. — Charles Joseph Singer, Studies in the History and Method of Science


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  • Jejune — is the name of a band which formed in the mid 90s at Berklee College of Music in Boston, Massachusetts. The band has been commonly identified with the emo genre, particularly the late 90s indie emo scene. The three founding members, Arabella… …   Wikipedia

  • jejune — is pronounced ji joon. It properly means ‘meagre, scanty; dull or uninteresting’ and is used primarily of ideas or arguments. It is derived from the Latin word jejunus meaning ‘fasting’, and originally meant ‘without food’ in English. The writer… …   Modern English usage

  • Jejune — Datos generales Origen Boston, Massachusetts, Estados Unidos Información artís …   Wikipedia Español

  • Jejune — Je*june , a. [L. jejunus fasting, hungry, dry, barren, scanty; of unknown origin.] [1913 Webster] 1. Lacking matter; empty; void of substance. [1913 Webster] 2. Void of interest; barren; meager; dry; as, a jejune narrative. 3. Juvenile; childish; …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • jejune — I (dull) adjective bleak, boresome, boring, colorless, common, commonplace, drearisome, dreary, dry, flat, flavorless, hollow, indifferent, insipid, monotonous, ordinary, plain, ponderous, prosaic, prosy, stolid, tame, tasteless, tedious, thin,… …   Law dictionary

  • jejune — (adj.) 1610s, dull in the mind, flat, insipid, from L. ieiunus empty, dry, barren, lit. fasting, hungry, of obscure origin …   Etymology dictionary

  • jejune — insipid, vapid, flat, wishy washy, inane, banal Analogous words: *thin, slight, slim, tenuous: arid, *dry: attenuated, extenuated, diluted, thinned (see THIN vb): *meager, skimpy, exiguous Contrasted words: lavish, *profuse, lush, luxuriant,… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • jejune — ► ADJECTIVE 1) naive and simplistic. 2) (of ideas or writings) dull. ORIGIN Latin jejunus fasting, barren …   English terms dictionary

  • jejune — [ji jo͞on′] adj. [L jejunus, empty, dry, barren] 1. not nourishing; barren 2. not interesting or satisfying; dull or empty 3. [? by confusion with JUVENILE] not mature; childish jejunely adv. jejuneness n …   English World dictionary

  • jejune — jejunely, adv. jejuneness, jejunity, n. /ji joohn /, adj. 1. without interest or significance; dull; insipid: a jejune novel. 2. juvenile; immature; childish: jejune behavior. 3. lacking knowledge or experience; uninformed: jejune attempts to… …   Universalium

  • jejune — [[t]ʤɪʤu͟ːn[/t]] 1) ADJ GRADED (disapproval) If you describe something or someone as jejune, you are criticizing them for being very simple and unsophisticated. [FORMAL] They were of great service in correcting my jejune generalizations. 2) ADJ… …   English dictionary

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