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My whole life I thought nonplussed meant confused. Now I'm nonplussed. I read this article about Trump getting rid of the penny on CNBC:
this is one that most economists and others in the monetary ecosystem seem nonplussed about.
I took that to mean economists were confused. I think, though, that the author meant they were unconcerned. Now I was really nonplussed. So I googled the meaning, and found this:
I'm still nonplussed.
It seems there is an informal use where it is a synonym for unperturbed.
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This is what it means everyone else is wrong
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I always thought it was a weird word, and I assumed it was the opposite of plussed, whatever that is. I thought plussed must have meant clear and understandable. Boy was I wrong.
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"The word nonplussed comes from the Latin phrase nōn plūs, which means "not more". The word was first used in English in the 16th century."
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This was my sense
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I always thought it meant displeased.
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Rereading Harry Potter now. The cool thing is, both meanings of nonplussed would fit into the context here. Maybe J.K.Rowling meant it that way
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I feel this word should be reserved for creative writing because it is not efficient, as you have pointed out, and to me, it singularly communicates the facial expression/body signals one would make in the state of being confused.
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Some phrases and words bug me. This is one. I mean it's really how people use them though.
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It's always made me think of Orwellian New Speak, although it apparently has nothing to do with that.
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