From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishsuccinctsuc‧cinct /səkˈsɪŋkt/ adjective SHORT/NOT LONGclearly expressed in a few words – use this to show approval SYN concise a succinct explanation —succinctly adverb Anderson put the same point more succinctly. —succinctness noun [uncountable]
Examples from the Corpus
succinct• Jim Burke and Horace Deets were succinct.• Recent policy statements have been even more succinct.• We remember what is short and succinct.• The new labelling is more succinct and advises consumers simply that oat bran may help prevent heart disease.• Ray was seldom inclined to be succinct, and he gave his interrogators the full benefit of his thinking.• Each contribution is well referenced and has a succinct conclusion.• a succinct description of the Egyptian writing system• A good conceptual clusterer is one which finds a succinct meaningful hierarchy of succinct definitions of meaningful concepts.• He was simply making a point, stating a fact, in his inimitably succinct style.Origin succinct (1400-1500) Latin past participle of succingere “to tuck up”, from sub- ( → SUB-) + cingere “to put a belt around”