Definition: Talent
Etymology
From Middle English talent, from Old English talente, borrowed from the plural of Latin talentum (a Grecian weight; a talent of money), from Ancient Greek τάλαντον or tálanton (balance, a particular weight, especially of gold, sum of money, a talent). Compare Old High German talenta (talent). Later figurative senses are from Old French talent (talent, will, inclination, desire), derived from the biblical Parable of the Talents.
Noun
talent (plural talents)
- A marked natural ability or skill.
- He has a real talent for music.
- (historical) A unit of weight and money used in ancient times in Greece, the Roman Empire, and the Middle East, equal to about 30 to 60 kg in various times and places.
- (business, media, sports) People of talent, viewed collectively; a talented person.
- The director searched their talent pool to fill the new opening.
Derived terms
- talent community
- talent contest
- talent management
- talent scout
- talent show
- talent-spotter
- talent-spotting
- voice talent
Credits
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