palaver

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
12
Words With Friends
15
Letters
7
Pronunciation
/pəˈlɑː.və(ɹ)/(UK)

Definition of palaver

8 senses · 2 parts of speech · etymology included

noun

  1. (Africa, countable, uncountable)A village council meeting.
    “Here we remained four days, on account of a palaver which was held on the following occasion.”
    “That night the village warriors held a big palaver to celebrate their victories, and to choose a new chief.”
See all 8 definitions

noun

  1. (Africa, countable, uncountable)A village council meeting.
    “Here we remained four days, on account of a palaver which was held on the following occasion.”
    “That night the village warriors held a big palaver to celebrate their victories, and to choose a new chief.”
  2. (Canada, US, archaic, countable, uncountable)Talk, especially unnecessary talk; chatter.
    “Frances pulled his hair heartily, and then went and seated herself on her husband’s knee, and there they were, like two babies, kissing and talking nonsense by the hour—foolish palaver that we should be ashamed of.”
    “Knowing full well the right time and the wrong time for a palaver of regret and disavowal, this battalion struggled in the desperation of despair.”
    “Some of the palavers could take half a day.”
  3. (British, countable, uncountable)Mentally draining activity, either physical or fuss.
    “What a palaver!”
    “Not for the first time, he reflected that it was not so much the speeches that strained the nerves as the palaver that went with them.”
    “What's the good of going through all this palaver of giving very small sums to very obscure charities?”
    “We fill up the bathtub for a proper bath maybe once a month because it is such a palaver. We have a 150 litre pot and a 60 litre pot that we have to fill up and boil on the wood stove which takes hours.”
  4. (countable, uncountable)A meeting at which there is much talk; a debate; a moot.
    “this country and epoch of parliaments and eloquent palavers”
  5. (countable, informal, uncountable)Disagreement.
    “I have no palaver with him.”
  6. (countable, uncountable)Talk intended to deceive.

verb

  1. (intransitive)To discuss with much talk.
    ““Come, come, Captain Bildad; stop palavering,—away!” and with that, Peleg hurried him over the side, and both dropt into the boat.”
    ““That,” he rejoined, “is a way we Americans have. We cannot stop to palaver. What would become of our manifest destiny?””
  2. (transitive)To flatter.
    “Dodd never spoke to his officers like a ruffian, nor yet palavered them.”

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

Originally nautical slang, from Portuguese palavra (“word”), from Late Latin parabola (“parable, speech”). The term's use (especially in Africa) mimics the evolution of the word moot. As such, for sense development, see moot. Doublet of parable, parole, and parabola.

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1 extension · 1 back

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