critical

adjective

crit·​i·​cal ˈkri-ti-kəl How to pronounce critical (audio)
1
a
: inclined to criticize severely and unfavorably
Don't be so critical. This is just a first attempt.
They were critical of the new policies.
b
: consisting of or involving criticism
critical writings
also : of or relating to the judgment of critics
The play was a critical success.
c
: exercising or involving careful judgment or judicious evaluation
critical thinking
a critical commentary on the mayor's proposal
d
: including variant readings and scholarly emendations
a critical edition
2
a
: of, relating to, or being a turning point or specially important juncture
a critical decision
: such as
(1)
: being or relating to an illness or condition involving danger of death
critical care
hospitalized with a critical illness
The driver sustained critical injuries.
also : relating to or being the stage of a disease at which an abrupt change for better or worse may be expected
the critical phase of dengue fever
see also critical condition
(2)
: relating to or being a state, measurement, or point in or at which some quality, property, or phenomenon suffers a definite change
critical temperature
b
: indispensable, vital
a critical waterfowl habitat
a component critical to the machine's operation
c
: being in or approaching a state of crisis
a critical shortage
a critical situation
d
: crucial, decisive
a critical test
3
a
: of sufficient size to sustain a chain reaction
used of a mass of fissionable material
a critical mass
b
: sustaining a nuclear chain reaction
The reactor went critical.
critically adverb
a critically ill patient
The author's texts were examined critically.
criticalness noun
How early winter arrives will determine the criticalness of planting date. Ed Lentz
Choose the Right Synonym for critical

critical, hypercritical, faultfinding, captious, carping, censorious mean inclined to look for and point out faults and defects.

critical may also imply an effort to see a thing clearly and truly in order to judge it fairly.

a critical essay

hypercritical suggests a tendency to judge by unreasonably strict standards.

hypercritical disparagement of other people's work

faultfinding implies a querulous or exacting temperament.

a faultfinding reviewer

captious suggests a readiness to detect trivial faults or raise objections on trivial grounds.

a captious critic

carping implies an ill-natured or perverse picking of flaws.

a carping editorial

censorious implies a disposition to be severely critical and condemnatory.

the censorious tone of the review

synonyms see in addition acute

Examples of critical in a Sentence

The program presents a critical analysis of the government's strategies. She has a talent for critical thinking. We need to look at these proposed changes with a critical eye before we accept them.
Recent Examples on the Web
These examples are automatically compiled from online sources to illustrate current usage. Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
With guidance from Clint Vince, Rayburn’s outside counsel, who had helped the utility with all of its critical decisions from the time Raymond organized it, the co-op bit the bullet early. Llewellyn King, Forbes, 2 Nov. 2024 Thus the critical question for investors: What are the chances that Nvidia will perform well enough in future years to justify the stock’s price, recently about $136? Geoff Colvin, Fortune, 2 Nov. 2024 We’re offered little sense of his life — domestically, professionally or socially — outside what Naveen sees, and little of their own routine as a couple beyond critical milestones and confrontations, though their chemistry is unforced and entirely credible. Guy Lodge, Variety, 2 Nov. 2024 Biden’s team was locked out of briefings from critical federal agencies like the Pentagon, the Department of Justice and the Department of Homeland Security. Brian Bennett, TIME, 2 Nov. 2024 See all Example Sentences for critical 

Word History

Etymology

in sense "being at a turning point," from 16th-17th century cretike, criticke "at a turning point" (Middle English cretic, borrowed from Late Latin criticus "at a turning point, decisive," borrowed from Greek kritikós, taken as derivative of krísis crisis, replacing earlier krísimos) + -al entry 1; in sense "inclined to criticize, involving criticism," from critic entry 1 + -al entry 1 — more at critic entry 1

First Known Use

1556, in the meaning defined at sense 2a

Time Traveler
The first known use of critical was in 1556

Dictionary Entries Near critical

Cite this Entry

“Critical.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/critical. Accessed 16 Nov. 2024.

Kids Definition

critical

adjective
crit·​i·​cal ˈkrit-i-kəl How to pronounce critical (audio)
1
a
: inclined to criticize unfavorably
b
: consisting of or involving criticism or the judgments of critics
critical writings
c
: using or involving careful judgment
a critical examination of a patient
2
a
: of, relating to, or being a turning point
the critical phase of a fever
also : being at a stage of illness involving danger of death
b
: being or relating to a state or point at which a definite change occurs
the critical temperature
c
: crucial sense 1
a critical test
3
: indispensable, vital
provides critical services
4
: of big enough size to keep a chain reaction going
used of a mass of material that can go through fission
critically adverb
criticalness noun

Medical Definition

critical

adjective
crit·​i·​cal ˈkrit-i-kəl How to pronounce critical (audio)
1
: being or relating to an illness or condition involving danger of death
critical care
a critical head injury
see also critical condition
2
: relating to, indicating, or being the stage of a disease at which an abrupt change for better or worse may be anticipated with reasonable certainty
the critical phase of dengue fever
critically adverb
critically ill

More from Merriam-Webster on critical

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