gist
gist — noun
1. The essential idea that you take away from a conversation, piece of writing, or
The essential idea that you take away from a conversation, piece of writing, or discussion, as opposed to the supporting details.
Hana read the abstract and understood the gist of the research paper.
the gist of [something] — general pattern
The manager asked Wei to summarize the gist of the three-hour meeting.
summarize the gist — common verb collocation
I missed parts of the lecture, but I got the gist of what the professor said.
After skimming the first chapter, Sofia could explain the gist of the novel.
The gist of the article was that the city plans to build a new library.
- essence
Slightly more formal; 'gist' is more conversational and suggests you have extracted the meaning from a longer source.
- core
Focuses on the central or most important part; 'gist' implies that surrounding details have been stripped away.
- thrust
Describes the main direction or argument; 'gist' emphasizes the overall meaning rather than the line of reasoning.
- main point
More literal and plain; 'gist' carries a slight sense of having grasped something from a complex whole.
文法句型
the gist of something
用法筆記
Used almost exclusively in the structure 'the gist of something'. Common verbs paired with it include 'get', 'grasp', 'catch', 'understand', 'summarize', and 'explain'. The word is typically singular and does not take an article other than 'the'.
常見錯誤
⚠️ "Give me the gist of what happened" — This is common and grammatically fine in everyday English. However, some learners overuse "gist" for any kind of short version. ✅ Use "gist" when talking about the essential meaning or main point you extract from something, not for a condensed retelling someone else prepared.