: involving or accomplished with careful perseverance
sedulous craftsmanship
2
: diligent in application or pursuit
a sedulous student
sedulouslyadverb
sedulousnessnoun
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Dedicate Yourself to Learning the History of Sedulous
No fooling—the word sedulous ultimately comes from Latin se dolus, which literally means "without guile." Those two words were eventually melded into one, sedulo, meaning "sincerely" or "diligently," and from that root developed Latin sedulus and English sedulous. Don't let the sed- beginning mislead you; sedulous is not related to words such as sedentary or sedate (those derive from the Latin verb sedēre, meaning "to sit"). Sedulous people are not the sedate or sedentary sort. They're the hardworking types Scottish author Samuel Smiles must have had in mind when he wrote in his 1859 book Self-Help, "Sedulous attention and painstaking industry always mark the true worker."
busy chiefly stresses activity as opposed to idleness or leisure.
too busy to spend time with the children
industrious implies characteristic or habitual devotion to work.
industrious employees
diligent suggests earnest application to some specific object or pursuit.
very diligent in her pursuit of a degree
assiduous stresses careful and unremitting application.
assiduous practice
sedulous implies painstaking and persevering application.
a sedulous investigation of the murder
Example Sentences
an impressively sedulous suitor, he was constantly sending her flowers and other tokens of his affection
Recent Examples on the WebManchin has been a sedulous supporter of the fossil fuel industry. Michael Hiltzik, Los Angeles Times, 16 Mar. 2022 The skirmish over Arista was the second great battle of Clive’s life, as a sedulous Vanity Fair account of the affair put it. Amy X. Wang, Rolling Stone, 9 Sep. 2021 One might be tempted to defend this sedulous cultivation of Tom Barrack by Bloomberg and Charlie Rose by asserting that no one on the outside could know the truth of what was going on inside Trump’s brain or the Middle East at the time. Michael Hiltzik, Los Angeles Times, 21 July 2021
Word History
Etymology
Latin sedulus, from sedulo sincerely, diligently, from sed-, se without + dolus guile — more at suicide