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Definition of shrewd adjective from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

shrewd

adjective
 
/ʃruːd/
 
/ʃruːd/
(comparative shrewder, superlative shrewdest)
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  1. clever at understanding and making judgements about a situation synonym astute
    • a shrewd businessman
    • She is a shrewd judge of character.
    • Paul was too shrewd to be taken in by this argument.
    Topics Personal qualitiesc2
  2. showing good judgement and likely to be right
    • a shrewd move
    • I have a shrewd idea who the mystery caller was.
    • I could take a pretty shrewd guess at who had sent the letter.
  3. Word OriginMiddle English (in the sense ‘evil in nature or character’): from shrew in the sense ‘evil person or thing’, or as the past participle of obsolete shrew ‘to curse’. The word developed the sense ‘cunning’, and gradually gained a favourable connotation during the 17th cent.
See shrewd in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
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noun
 
 
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