Pontificate

Pontificate

pänˈtifəˌkāt

Verb

  • Express one’s opinions in a way considered annoyingly pompous and dogmatic.

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Example Sentences

“My aunt can dominate any conversation, pontificating for hours on subjects only she finds interesting.”

“Rather than pontificate, he led off the meeting by asking each team member’s opinion first.” 

“It can be too easy to pontificate on a subject like education reform when you haven’t experienced difficulties in it firsthand.”

Word Origin

Latin, early 19th century

Why this word?

The word “pontificate” originally comes from a tradition in the Roman Catholic Church. As a noun, “pontificate” refers to the office or tenure of a pope or bishop, and as a verb, it describes officiating as a bishop, especially at Mass. Ties to bishops aside, delivering opinions in a pontificating manner means offering those views specifically in a pompous and dogmatic way. Synonyms for this manner of speech are “expound,” “declaim,” “preach,” “sermonize,” and “lecture.” 

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äbˈno͞obəˌlāt