trait









trait


trait [treyt; British also trey] SynonymsExamplesWord Origin See more synonyms for trait on Thesaurus.com noun

  1. a distinguishing characteristic or quality, especially of one’s personal nature: bad traits of character.
  2. a pen or pencil stroke.
  3. a stroke, touch, or strain, as of some quality: a trait of pathos; a trait of ready wit.

Origin of trait 1470–80; Middle French: literally, something drawn Latin tractus. See tract1 Synonyms for trait See more synonyms for on Thesaurus.com 1. peculiarity, mark, attribute, property. Related Words for trait trick, habit, attribute, quirk, character, feature, peculiarity, oddity, virtue, idiosyncrasy, quality, manner, birthmark, custom, cast, savor, point, mannerism, mark, thing Examples from the Web for trait Contemporary Examples of trait

  • This uniqueness is a trait that she attributes to her early success as a dominatrix.

    Whip It: Secrets of a Dominatrix

    Justin Jones

    November 25, 2014

  • By using some sort of filter—like, perhaps, a universally understood saying—the trait is more easily conveyed.

    Scotland’s ‘Yes’ Campaign and the Myth of Scottish Equality

    Noah Caldwell

    September 18, 2014

  • The Royalist has always maintained that Harry’s red hair is a Spencer, not a Hewitt trait.

    Prince Harry Definitely Not James Hewitt’s Son According To DNA Test

    Tom Sykes

    September 6, 2014

  • Without delving into spoilers, what if a trait like vulnerability can also be a source of strength?

    Book Bag: How to Survive—Five Stories About Unlikely Survivors

    Claire Cameron

    February 11, 2014

  • The trait was especially essential for Nathan, a straight-man character Garcia patterned after himself.

    Will Arnett on ‘The Millers,’ ‘Arrested Development,’ and More

    Jason Lynch

    October 2, 2013

  • Historical Examples of trait

  • It is a trait, moreover, which finds expression in almost everything he wrote.

    The Man Shakespeare

    Frank Harris

  • As one trait disappeared, no other trait sprung up to take its place.

    Life And Adventures Of Martin Chuzzlewit

    Charles Dickens

  • No catalogue of American qualities and defects can exclude the trait of individualism.

    The American Mind

    Bliss Perry

  • It was this trait in my character which led to the incident I am about to tell you of.

    Harper’s Young People, July 27, 1880

    Various

  • The trait of which I am speaking, I replied, may be also seen in the dog, and is remarkable in the animal.

    The Republic

    Plato

  • British Dictionary definitions for trait trait noun

    1. a characteristic feature or quality distinguishing a particular person or thing
    2. rare a touch or stroke

    Word Origin for trait C16: from French, from Old French: a pulling, from Latin tractus, from trahere to drag Word Origin and History for trait n.

    late 15c., “shot, missiles;” later “a stroke, short line” (1580s), from Middle French trait, from Latin tractus “draft, drawing, drawing out,” later “line drawn, feature,” from past participle stem of trahere “to pull, draw” (see tract (n.1)). Sense of “particular feature, distinguishing quality” is first recorded 1752, from meaning “line, streak, feature” (1560s), which is common to English, French, and Latin.

    trait in Medicine trait [trāt] n.

    1. A genetically determined structure, attribute, or function.
    2. A distinct pattern of behavior.

    trait in Science trait [trāt]

    1. A genetically determined characteristic or condition. Traits may be physical, such as hair color or leaf shape, or they may be behavioral, such as nesting in birds and burrowing in rodents. Traits typically result from the combined action of several genes, though some traits are expressed by a single gene.
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