Tenuous means thin, shaky, not solid or secure. So if you say, for instance, there seems to be a tenuous relationship between what I eat and my grade point average, you might mean that it seems like there is some relationship between the two based on your own personal experience, but you don't really have any solid evidence to support the idea that your diet is affecting your ability to study or take tests well.
The threads of the spider web were tenuous.Lacking substance or significance, a tenuous argument took place.Your argument is tenuous at best.
The Latin root for the words tenuous and attenuate is the word tenuis meaning thin.
New relationship status ?
Lack of commitment
They are in a relationship and enjoying it.
Their relationship had always been tenuous, so it wasn't difficult for her to cut her chronically alcoholic sister out of her life completely. Plans for the picnic are tenuous because it looks like it might rain.
The event that stabilized the formerly tenuous relationship between Christians and Jews is the Second Vatican Council. The other name for the old testament is Torah.
Tenuous is an adjective.
The threads of the spider web were tenuous.Lacking substance or significance, a tenuous argument took place.Your argument is tenuous at best.
a news that effects the parallelism and the tenuous relationship that makes the dynamic of the national press and local press most efficient and less monotonous
Tenuous at best. Many people with very high IQ are immature, and mature people may or may not have a high IQ.
At one point best known for his modeling career, Canadian Gabriel Aubry is now moreso known for his relationship with Halle Berry. Unfortunately the relationship went south, which has led to a publicly tenuous relationship with Berry's new beau.
The Latin root for the words tenuous and attenuate is the word tenuis meaning thin.
adjective 1. thin or slender in form, as a thread. 2. lacking a sound basis, as reasoning; unsubstantiated; weak: a tenuous argument. 3. thin in consistency rare or rarefied. 4. of slight importance or significance; unsubstantial: He holds a rather tenuous position in history. 5. lacking in clarity; vague: He gave a rather tenuous account of his past life.
atomoshere
In an advanced or developing country that contains primitive or even small tribal societies, these societies often have a tenuous connection at most to their national governments.
He kept telling her that he was too busy with his coursework to spend time with her, and she clung to the tenuous belief that he was telling the truth, even after she saw him walking around campus with other girls.Because the rapist had drugged her with rohypnol (GHB), she was only able to give a tenuous account of the terrible ordeal.She is a supportive friend and a great listener, who will patiently discuss even the most tenuous details and mundane anecdotes I have to share.