Gravitas

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Look up gravitas in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

Gravitas is a Latin noun that, as a modern loanword, conveys a sense of substance or depth of personality.

In an ancient Roman context, the word gravitas communicated a sense of dignity, seriousness, and duty. Gravitas is one of the several virtues that Ancient Roman society expected men to possess, along with pietas and dignitas.

Gravitas should not be confused with gravity, the force of attraction between masses.

  • The Boston Globe commented (in September 2003) that Vice President Dick Cheney was making mis-statements and, perhaps, over-relying on his perceived gravitas to keep him out of trouble with the media. [3]
  • Stephen Colbert prides himself on his gravitas, which he describes as "the ability to make whatever one's talking about sound extremely important." Colbert has staged two "Gravitas-Off" matches on The Colbert Report with Stone Phillips, where Colbert and Phillips have taken turns reading random lines of news copy and tongue-twisters with gravitas.
  • Various episodes of The West Wing featured characters discussing the gravitas (or lack thereof) of specific candidates or their policies.


This page has been transwikied to Wiktionary.

Because this article has content useful to Wikipedia's sister project Wiktionary, it has been copied to there, and its dictionary counterpart can be found at either Wiktionary:Transwiki:Gravitas or Wiktionary:Gravitas. It should no longer appear in Category:Copy to Wiktionary and should not be re-added there.
Wikipedia is not a dictionary, and if this article cannot be expanded beyond a dictionary definition, it should be tagged for deletion. If it can be expanded into an article, please do so and remove this template.
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