Meaning
Conceit is a noun with two main meanings:
- Excessive pride in oneself — an attitude of vanity or arrogance.
- A fanciful or extended metaphor used in literature or poetry.
Grammar and Usage
- Part of speech: noun
- Usually uncountable when referring to pride (e.g., full of conceit).
- Can be countable when referring to a literary device (e.g., a clever conceit in the poem).
Sentence structures:
- "be full of conceit"
- "display/express conceit"
- "conceit of comparing A to B" (literary use)
Common Phrases
- Full of conceit
- Intellectual conceit
- A clever conceit (literary)
- A poetic conceit
Collocations
- Adjective + conceit: sheer conceit, intellectual conceit, poetic conceit
- Verb + conceit: display conceit, reveal conceit, disguise conceit
- Preposition + conceit: out of conceit, with conceit
Examples
- His constant bragging showed how full of conceit he was.
- She entered the room with such conceit that no one wanted to talk to her.
- The poet’s clever conceit compared life to a fragile glass vase.
- Intellectual conceit can prevent people from admitting their mistakes.
- He disguised his conceit under false modesty.
- The novel is structured around the conceit of a journey through time.
- Her success gave her a sense of conceit that annoyed her colleagues.
Synonyms or Related
- For pride: arrogance, vanity, egotism, hubris
- For literary sense: metaphor, simile, figure of speech
Antonym
- For pride: humility, modesty
- For literary sense: plain statement, literal expression