Dictionary Definition
trivial adj
1 (informal terms) small and of little
importance; "a fiddling sum of money"; "a footling gesture"; "our
worries are lilliputian compared with those of countries that are
at war"; "a little (or small) matter"; "Mickey Mouse regulations";
"a dispute over niggling details"; "limited to petty enterprises";
"piffling efforts"; "giving a police officer a free meal may be
against the law, but it seems to be a picayune infraction" [syn:
fiddling, footling, lilliputian, little, Mickey
Mouse, niggling,
piddling, piffling, petty, picayune]
2 obvious and dull; "trivial conversation";
"commonplace prose" [syn: banal, commonplace]
3 of little substance or significance; "a few
superficial editorial changes"; "only trivial objections" [syn:
superficial]
4 concerned with trivialities; "a trivial young
woman"; "a trivial mind"
5 not large enough to consider or notice [syn:
insignificant]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From trivialis (crossroads, where three roads meet); from tri- (three) + via (way or road) + adjective suffix -alis. See triviumAdjective
- Of little significance or value.
- Common, ordinary.
- Concerned with or involving trivia.
- Relating to or designating the name of a species; specific as opposed to generic.
- Of, relating to, or being the simplest possible case.
- Self-evident.
Derived terms
Translations
of little significance or value
- Croatian: trivijalan
- Finnish: mitätön, triviaali
- Japanese: つまらない, 些細な, 些末の
- Russian: незначительный, мелкий, ничтожный
common, ordinary
- Finnish: tavallinen, yksinkertainen
- Japanese: ありふれた
- Russian: тривиальный (triviál’nyj), банальный (banál'nyj), обычный (obýčnyj)
concerned with or involving trivia
- Finnish: tyhjänpäiväinen, turhanaikainen
- Japanese: 蛇足の
(biology) relating to, or designating a species
- Japanese: 通称
(mathematics) of being the simplest possible
case
- Finnish: triviaali
- Russian: тривиальный (triviál’nyj)
(mathematics) self-evident
- Finnish: triviaali
- Japanese: 自明な
- Russian: тривиальный (triviál’nyj)
- ttbc Arabic: (tāfi)
- ttbc Chinese: 瑣碎, 琐碎 (suǒsuì)
- ttbc Czech: triviální
- ttbc Dutch: onbeduidend
- ttbc French: trivial
- ttbc German: trivial
- ttbc Hungarian: triviális
- ttbc Italian: banale
- ttbc Korean: 사소한 (sasohan)
- ttbc Lithuanian: trivialus
- ttbc Portuguese: trivial
- ttbc Spanish: trivial
- ttbc Swedish: bagatelle
Extensive Definition
Trivia (singular: trivium) are unimportant (or
"trivial") items, especially of information. In the late 20th
century the expression came to apply more to information of the
kind useful almost exclusively for answering quiz questions: a
perfect "trivia question" is one that initially stumps the
listener, but the answer subsequently sounds familiar once revealed
(otherwise the question would be considered either too familiar and
therefore not trivia, or so unfamiliar and obscure as to be
unanswerable and not as entertaining). The study or collection of
trivia is known as spermology, which literally means collection of
seeds.
Etymology
The etymology of the word trivia seems to start with Latin tri- = "three", and via = "way", "road", thus trivium, which has been treated in two ways:- "Where three roads meet", especially as a place of public resort. The Latin adjective triviālis, derived from trivium, thus meant "appropriate to the street corner, commonplace, vulgar." The first known usage of the word "trivial" in Modern English is from 1589; it was used with a sense identical to that of triviālis. Shortly after that trivial is recorded in the sense most familiar to us: "of little importance or significance." Gradually, the word trivia came to be used in English for what in Latin would have called "triviālia", for anything information or concern which is treated as everyday and unimportant.
- "The Three Ways" (first known used in English in a work from 1432–1450). This work mentions the "arte trivialle", referring to the trivium, which was the three Artes Liberales (Liberal Arts) that were taught first in medieval universities, namely grammar, rhetoric, and logic. (The other four Liberal Arts were the quadrivium, namely arithmetic, geometry, music, and astronomy, which were more challenging.) Hence, trivial in this sense would have meant "of interest only to an undergraduate".
The word "trivia" was popularized in its current
meaning in the 1960s by Columbia
University students Ed Goodgold and Dan Carlinsky, who created
the earliest inter-collegiate quiz bowls that tested culturally
significant yet ultimately unimportant facts, which they dubbed
"trivia contests". The first book treating trivia of this universal
sort was Trivia (Dell, 1966) by Goodgold and Carlinsky, which
achieved a ranking on the New York Times best seller list; the book
was an extension of the pair's Columbia contests and was followed
by other Goodgold and Carlinsky trivia titles. In their second
book, More Trivial Trivia, the authors criticized practitioners who
were "indiscriminate enough to confuse the flower of Trivia with
the weed of minutiae"; Trivia, they wrote, "is concerned with
tugging at heartstrings," while minutiae deals with such
unevocative questions as "Which state is the largest consumer of
Jell-O?" But over the years the word has come to refer to obscure
and arcane bits of dry knowledge as well as nostalgic remembrances
of pop culture.
Quiz shows
In the 1960s, nostalgic college students and others began to informally trade questions and answers about the popular culture of their youth. The first known documented labeling of this casual parlor game as "Trivia" was in a Columbia Daily Spectator column published on February 5, 1965. A stage contest held in Columbia's Ferris Booth Hall on March 1 of that year, reported in campus press and the New York Post, was the first occasion in which the pastime was formalized. After the much-publicized First Annual Ivy League-Seven Sisters Trivia Contest, held at Columbia the following semester, and subsequent Trivia bowls on campuses across the country, the codified form of the diversion became an institution.In 1974, a former Sacramento
air
traffic controller named Fred L. Worth published The Trivia
Encyclopedia, which he followed in 1977 with The Complete
Unabridged Super Trivia Encyclopedia, and in 1981 with Super
Trivia, vol. II. The popularity of books by Goodgold and Carlinsky,
Worth and others in the 1960s and 1970s laid the groundwork for the
first edition of the board game Trivial
Pursuit in the early 1980s.
The enormous success of this game led, in the
United
States, to the re-launch of Jeopardy!,
reviving a quiz show genre that had been dormant since the quiz
show scandals of the 1950s. The American TV broadcaster
ABC had a surprise hit with
Who Wants to be a Millionaire, an import of a successful
British
quiz format which launched another wave of interest in trivia. In
both the UK and
Canada, the
quiz format has enjoyed continuous success since the 1950s,
untouched by the scandals that dogged the American format.
In addition to the mass media trivia, there have
also been two entrenched trivia subcultures. One is the pub quiz
phenomenon, which is especially prevalent in Great
Britain and in select U.S. cities, particularly in pubs that
serve a large Irish-American
community. (The U.S. pub quiz scene is crimped by the popularity of
Buzztime, a
satellite-based game.)
Quiz bowls
The other subculture is the quizbowl format found in high schools and universities in the U.S., as well as in elementary, middle, and junior high schools; the Canadian equivalent is competition geared toward Reach for the Top, among high schools, whereas Canadian universities are beginning to participate in U.S. quiz bowl leagues.The largest current trivia contest is held in
Stevens
Point, Wisconsin, at the
University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point's college radio station WWSP 89.9
FM. This is a college station with 11,500 watts of power and
about a 65 mile (105 km) radius, and the contest
serves as a fund raiser for the station. The contest is open to
anyone, and it is played in April of each year spanning 54 hours
over a weekend with eight questions each hour. There are usually
500 teams ranging from 1 to 50 players. The top ten teams are
awarded trophies.
The University of Colorado Trivia Bowl was a
mostly-student contest featuring a single-elimination tournament
based on the GE College
Bowl. Many of the best trivia players in America trace
participation through this tournament including many Jeopardy! and
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? contestants.
See also
References
Resources
- American Heritage Dictionaries (2000). The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (4th ed.). Houghton Mifflin Company. ISBN 0-395-82517-2.
External links
- – An active listing of trivia links.
trivial in Bulgarian: Тривия
trivial in German: Trivia
trivial in French: Culture générale
trivial in Hindi: सामान्य ज्ञान
trivial in Hebrew: טריוויה
trivial in Hungarian: Trivia
trivial in Dutch: Triviaal
trivial in Japanese: トリヴィア
trivial in Norwegian: Trivialiteter
trivial in Albanian: Trivia
trivial in Finnish: Triviatieto
trivial in Swedish: Trivia
trivial in Chinese: 冷知識
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Mickey,
NG, airy, ankle-deep, asinine, base, bickering, captious, casual, catchpenny, caviling, cheap, choplogic, cursory, deficient, depthless, empty, epidermal, equivocatory, evasive, fatuous, few, flimsy, foolish, footling, fribble, fribbling, frivolous, frothy, futile, good-for-naught,
good-for-nothing, hairsplitting, hedging, idle, imperfect, inadequate, inane, incompetent, inconsequential,
inconsiderable,
insignificant,
insufficient,
jejune, junk, junky, knee-deep, light, little, logic-chopping, low, maladroit, meager, mean, measly, mediocre, miniature, minor, negligible, nit-picking, no
great shakes, no-account, no-good, not comparable, not deep, not in
it, not worth having, not worth mentioning, not worthwhile,
nugacious, nugatory, on the surface,
otiose, out of it,
paltering, petty, picayune, picayunish, pussyfooting, quibbling, shabby, shallow, shallow-rooted,
shoal, shoddy, shoestring, short, shuffling, silly, skin-deep, slender, slight, small, small-beer, superficial, surface, thin, tiny, trashy, trichoschistic, trifling, trite, unimportant, unprofound, unskillful, vacuous, vain, valueless, vapid, windy, worthless