frugal

pronunciation

How to pronounce frugal in British English: UK [ˈfruːɡl]word uk audio image

How to pronounce frugal in American English: US [ˈfruːɡl] word us audio image

  • Adjective:
    avoiding waste

Word Origin

frugal
frugal: [16] Paradoxically, frugal comes from a source that meant ‘fruitful’. English borrowed it from Latin frūgālis, which was derived from the adjective frūgī ‘useful’. This in turn was the dative case of the noun frūx ‘fruit, value’, which came from the same base as frūctus, the source of English fruit. The links in the semantic chain seem to have been that something that was ‘useful, valuable, or productive’ was also ‘profitable’, and that in order to be ‘profitable’ it must be ‘economical’ – hence frugal’s connotations of ‘careful expenditure’.=> fruit
frugal (adj.)
"economical in use," 1590s, from Middle French frugal, from Latin frugalis, from undeclined adjective frugi "useful, proper, worthy, honest; temperate, economical," originally dative of frux (plural fruges) "fruit, produce," figuratively "value, result, success," related to fructus (see fruit), from PIE *bhrug- "agricultural produce," also "to enjoy." Sense evolved in Latin from "useful" to "profitable" to "economical." Related: Frugally.

Antonym

adj.

wasteful

Example

1. Have us consumers forgotten their frugal ways so soon ?
2. They are accustomed to being frugal .
3. I think I 'm a fairly frugal person .
4. Western consumers have become more frugal .
5. Frugal does not mean second-rate .

more: >How to Use "frugal" with Example Sentences