peculiar
How to Use Peculiar
Learner’s notesIn plain EnglishEither "strange/odd" or "specific and unique to something" — context tells you which.
When followed by "to" (e.g. "peculiar to this region"), it means "specific/unique to", not "strange".
Word Forms
more peculiar comparative, peculiars plural, most peculiar superlative
Fill the Gap
Can you complete this real example?
There was a _____ smell coming from the basement.
Etymology
From Latin pecūliāris ("one's own property"), from pecūlium ("private property"), ultimately from pecus ("cattle") — livestock once being a measure of personal wealth.