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Definition

A casual or partial familiarity; a relationship which is not close or fully developed; an inexact understanding (of something).

Someone who is a remote or passing acquaintance.

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In Context

  • "None of the quarrymen were intimate friends of mine. I had a nodding acquaintance with them."
  • "There isn't any doubt but that he had a nodding acquaintance with every pretty girl in town."
  • "[A] Northwestern University psychologist reported, for what it was worth, a surprising finding: an average college-educated modern man has at least a nodding acquaintance with four times as many words as Shakespeare used."
  • "A government with even a nodding acquaintance with competence and good sense would have launched an all-out war against Al Qaeda, not Iraq, in the immediate aftermath of Sept. 11."
  • "[T]o reach Cattewater I must either fetch a circuit through purlieus where every householder knew me and every urchin was a nodding acquaintance, or make a straight dash."
  • "He could not treat this scandalous matter in his own office. . . . Who was there he could go to? Linkman and Laver in Budge Row, perhaps—reliable, not too conspicuous, only nodding acquaintances."
  • "[S]he knows only two of them as nodding acquaintances, and has never spoken to them privately."
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See Also

  • on nodding terms