: the point of the celestial sphere that is directly opposite the zenith and vertically downward from the observer
2
: the lowest point
Illustration of nadir
1 nadir
2 observer
3 zenith
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Nadir Has Arabic Roots
Nadir is part of the galaxy of scientific words that have come to us from Arabic, a language that has made important contributions to the English lexicon especially in the fields of mathematics, astronomy, medicine, and chemistry. The source of nadir is naḍhīr, meaning "opposite"—the opposite, that is, of the zenith, the highest point of the celestial sphere which is positioned vertically above the observer. (The word zenith itself is a modification of another Arabic word that means "the way over one's head.") According to our sources, usage of nadir reached an apex in the 1980s. But worry not for the word’s future: it’s still flying high.
Nantucket reached its nadir in the post-Civil War period. The whaling industry had become moribund, many New Englanders had been lured to California by the discovery of gold, and the island population dropped from ten thousand in 1830 to scarcely more than three thousand in 1880.—David H. Wood, Antiques, August 1995But then, at the very nadir of that dark abandoned moment, that moment of despair and sickness unto death, …—T. Coraghessan Boyle, The Road to Wellville, 1993My nadir was the time I presented an oral book report on "Les Misérables," having read only the Classic Comics version …—Stephen Jay Gould, New York Times Book Review, 12 Oct. 1986
The relationship between the two countries reached a nadir in the 1920s.
the discussion really reached its nadir when people resorted to name-calling
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The controversy—and Gascón’s response to it—represented the nadir of what British Vogue’s film and culture editor Radhika Seth has called the messiest Oscars race in recent memory.—Kerry McDermott, Vogue, 2 Mar. 2025 Everton’s first goal was the nadir for that curios theme of United’s display.—Laurie Whitwell, The Athletic, 23 Feb. 2025 In 2023, Pew Research Center, which has studied the issue since the late 1950s, found that public trust in the federal government had sunk to 16%, a nadir not seen during the Vietnam War, Watergate, the Iran Hostage Crisis, or the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.—Adam Chandler, TIME, 20 Feb. 2025 Yet, rather than serve as a launching point for an ascendant career, the album instead feels like its nadir.—Matthew Ismael Ruiz, Vulture, 12 Feb. 2025 See All Example Sentences for nadir
Word History
Etymology
Middle English, from Middle French, from Arabic naḍhīr opposite
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