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  1. Dictionary
    fastidious
    /faˈstɪdɪəs/

    adjective

    • 1. very attentive to and concerned about accuracy and detail: "she dressed with fastidious care"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. FASTIDIOUS definition: 1. giving too much attention to small details and wanting everything to be correct and perfect: 2…. Learn more.

  3. The meaning of FASTIDIOUS is extremely or excessively careful or detailed. How to use fastidious in a sentence. Fastidious Has a Disgusting Past

  4. Fastidious is occasionally used as a compliment to describe someone whose attention to detail gives them good organizing abilities, but it is usually used as a disapproving term. Definitions of fastidious. adjective. giving careful attention to detail; hard to please; excessively concerned with cleanliness. “a fastidious and incisive intellect”

  5. giving too much attention to small details and wanting everything to be correct and perfect: fastidious about He is very fastidious about how a suitcase should be packed. having a strong dislike of anything dirty or unpleasant: They were too fastidious to eat in a fast-food restaurant. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  6. If you say that someone is fastidious, you mean that they pay great attention to detail.

  7. Define fastidious. fastidious synonyms, fastidious pronunciation, fastidious translation, English dictionary definition of fastidious. adj. 1. Showing or acting with careful attention to detail: a fastidious scholar; fastidious research.

  8. Definition of fastidious adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  9. A complete guide to the word "FASTIDIOUS": definitions, pronunciations, synonyms, grammar insights, collocations, examples, and translations.

  10. Fastidious definition: excessively particular, critical, or demanding; hard to please. See examples of FASTIDIOUS used in a sentence.

  11. From Latin fastidiosus (“passive: that feels disgust, disdainful, scornful, fastidious; active: that causes disgust, disgusting, loathsome”), from fastidium (“a loathing, aversion, disgust, niceness of taste, daintiness, etc.”), perhaps for *fastutidium, from fastus (“disdain, haughtiness, arrogance, disgust”) + taedium (“disgust”).