Home

obvious

Obvious is an adjective describing something easily perceived by the senses or easily understood; it implies that no special reasoning or evidence is required for someone to recognize it.

The word derives from Latin obvius “in the way, encountered, evident” via Old French and Early Modern

Usage and nuance: Obvious can be subjective; what is obvious to one person may not be for

Obvious contrasts with self-evident; self-evident things are true independently of belief, while what is obvious depends

Common collocations include obvious solution, obvious truth, and obviousness (the noun form). In everyday use, speakers

English;
etymology
traces
to
ob-
“toward,
in
the
way”
and
via
“road,
way.”
The
sense
of
plainly
visible
or
readily
comprehensible
developed
over
time
into
the
modern
English
usage.
another
due
to
knowledge,
experience,
or
assumptions.
In
rhetoric,
“obvious”
can
be
used
to
assert
a
point,
sometimes
as
a
criticism
if
the
claim
isn’t
universal.
on
perception,
context,
and
shared
knowledge.
may
mean
anything
from
plainly
visible
to
not
morally
or
politically
controversial.