Antonyms for crucial


Grammar : Adj
Spell : kroo-shuhl
Phonetic Transcription : ˈkru ʃəl


Definition of crucial

Origin :
  • 1706, "cross-shaped," from French crucial, a medical term for ligaments of the knee (which cross each other), from Latin crux (genitive crucis) "cross" (see cross (n.)). The meaning "decisive, critical" (1830) is extended from a logical term, Instantias Crucis, adopted by Francis Bacon (1620); the notion is of cross fingerboard signposts at forking roads, thus a requirement to choose.
  • adj critical, important
Example sentences :
  • Orley slapped his card down; it was a crucial card, the jack.
  • Extract from : « Goodbye, Dead Man! » by Tom W. Harris
  • But at any rate, no one will deny that interest is the crucial matter.
  • Extract from : « A Writer's Recollections (In Two Volumes), Volume II » by Mrs. Humphry Ward
  • What names will afford the most crucial test of natural fitness?
  • Extract from : « Cratylus » by Plato
  • Mrs. Winthrop helped him by her entrance at this crucial point.
  • Extract from : « David Dunne » by Belle Kanaris Maniates
  • The following and last experiment that I tried on this occasion was the most crucial.
  • Extract from : « Telepathy » by W. W. Baggally
  • I now come to what I consider the crucial point in the whole story.
  • Extract from : « A Master of Mysteries » by L. T. Meade
  • At this crucial moment, Pickering and Griswold sought out Burr as an ally.
  • Extract from : « Union and Democracy » by Allen Johnson
  • This was the crucial moment in the history of the merchant's son.
  • Extract from : « The False Chevalier » by William Douw Lighthall
  • His removal to London was one of the crucial events in the life of Marx.
  • Extract from : « Socialism » by John Spargo
  • The two were not idle, but in the crucial moment turned the scale.
  • Extract from : « The Long Roll » by Mary Johnston

Synonyms for crucial

Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019