nonplussing

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English

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Etymology

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By surface analysis, nonplus +‎ -ing.

Verb

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nonplussing

  1. present participle and gerund of nonplus

Adjective

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nonplussing (comparative more nonplussing, superlative most nonplussing)

  1. (uncommon) Confusing, bewildering, baffling or perplexing.
    • 1716, John Willison, “A Help For The Right Improvement of Communion Sabbaths”, in A Treatise Concerning the Sanctifying of the Lord's Day. And Particularly, The Right Improvement of a Communion-Sabbath, Direction V, page 255:
      We have to with a Heart ſearching God, who will find out every unworthy Communicant to his utter Shame and Confuſion ; when God examins ſuch, his Queſtions will be Nonpluſſing and Confounding, []
    • 1907, William A. Bryce, H. de Vere Stacpoole, “The Reavers: A Tale of Wild Adventure on the Moors of Lorne”, in The Boy's Own Annual, volume 29, In the fog (section XXV), page 803:
      Nothing can be so nonplussing to a seeker as to have to grope about in a fog for the thing sought.
    • 1993, Lacy Allen, Gardening With Groundcovers and Vines, HarperCollins, page 135:
      These brooms have in common a very nonplussing trait: they may die in winter, for no discernible reason.
    • 2007, Sharon Cameron, Impersonality: Seven Essays, University of Chicago Press, page 143:
      Specifically, it is the idea of the friend, in conjunction with the idea of a conversation, that is, the idea of the ordinary in conjunction with the presumption of benevolence (if friend could be assumed to imply such a connotation, and if conversation could be supposed to have this content), which illuminates what renders these propositions so nonplussing.
    • 2008, Kimberly Johnson, “A Psalm”, in A Metaphorical God: Poems, Karen & Michael Braziller, page 11:
      First the high pitch of blood inside the ear
      then another high sound inside the first,
      a vibrato caterwaul from that stunned

      and blurry infant face. Such blank noise.
      So nonplussing that foreign tongue, that most
      foreign body, open-mouthed and trembling, []
    • 2012 December, Lauren Wantz, Disapora, Xlibris US, page 233:
      We look like a council of two, a single pair of Sanhedrin warriors or elder Seraphim, we look like a solitary nation of no history, a duprass, Kurt Vonnegut called it. And what’s more nonplussing than anything else, we look happy.