Skip to content
word of the day

Table of Contents

The word for today is…

cogent (adj) – Appealing to the intellect or powers of reasoning; convincing.

Source : The Free Dictionary

Etymology : “Trained, knowledgeable agents make cogent suggestions … that make sense to customers.” It makes sense for us to include that comment from the president of a direct marketing consulting company because it provides such a nice opportunity to point out the etymological relationship between the words cogent and agent. Agent derives from the Latin verb agere, which means “to drive,” “to lead,” or “to act.” Adding the prefix co- to agere gave Latin cogere, a word that literally means “to drive together”; that ancient term ultimately gave English cogent . Something that is cogent figuratively pulls together thoughts and ideas, and the cogency of an argument depends on the driving intellectual force behind it.

Latest

We Can’t Say We Weren’t Warned

We Can’t Say We Weren’t Warned

What does all this mean for New Zealand? Unsurprisingly and happily, America’s National Security Strategy makes no mention of New Zealand. It would be great if the US forgot about us entirely in a situation where we have no obvious enemies, unless of course we choose to ally ourselves with the US.

Members Public