wise
How to Use Wise
Learner’s notesIn plain EnglishHaving good judgment and sound experience — or, in slang, being cheeky or smart-mouthed.
The old noun sense ("manner, way") survives mainly inside compound words like "likewise" and "otherwise," not as a standalone word in modern speech.
Word Forms
wiser comparative, more wise comparative, wised past tense, wised past tense, wises plural, wises singular, wises singular, wisest superlative, most wise superlative
Fill the Gap
Can you complete this real example?
It would be _____ to save some of the money instead of spending it all.
Etymology
From Old English wis, meaning "knowledgeable" or "wise," tracing back to a Proto-Indo-European root meaning "to see" — the same root that gives us "wit" and "vision."