Word
Of
The
Day
doughty
doughty \DOW-tee\
adjective
Doughty is a word with an old-fashioned flair used to describe someone who is brave, strong, and determined.
// The monument celebrates the
doughty townspeople who fended off invaders centuries ago.
See the entry >
Examples:
“The film chooses to render our
doughty heroes’ super-costumes as cerulean-blue rollneck sweaters, which is a puzzling choice both aesthetically and practically: knitwear seems literally ill-fitted to derring-do.” — Glen Weldon,
NPR, 25 July 2025
Did you know?
There’s no doubt that
doughty has persevered in the English language—it’s traceable all the way back to the Old English word
dohtig—but how to pronounce it? One might assume that
doughty should be pronounced \DAW-tee\, paralleling similarly spelled words like
bought and
sought, or perhaps with a long
o, as in
dough. But the vowel sound in
doughty is the same as in
doubt, and in fact, over the centuries,
doughty’s spelling was sometimes confused with that of the now obsolete word
doubty (“full of doubt”), which could be the reason we have the pronunciation we use today. The homophonous
dowdy (“having a dull or uninteresting appearance”) can also be a source of confusion; an easy way to remember the difference is that you can’t spell
doughty without the letters in
tough (“physically and emotionally strong”).