adj., cut·er, cut·est.
- Delightfully pretty or dainty.
- Obviously contrived to charm; precious: "[He] mugs so ferociously he kills the humor-it's an insufferably cute performance" (David Ansen).
- Shrewd; clever.
[Short for ACUTE.]
cutely cute'ly adv.cuteness cute'ness n.
WORD HISTORY Cute is a good example of how a shortened form of a word can take on a life of its own, developing a sense that dissociates it from the longer word from which it was derived. Cute was originally a shortened form of acute in the sense "keenly perceptive or discerning, shrewd." In this sense cute is first recorded in a dictionary published in 1731. Probably cute came to be used as a term of approbation for things demonstrating acuteness, and so it went on to develop its own sense of "pretty, fetching," first recorded with reference to "gals" in 1838.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.