midwit
English
Etymology
From mid- + wit; likely coined in line with nitwit, halfwit, etc.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈmɪdwɪt/
Noun
midwit (plural midwits)
- (neologism, chiefly Internet slang, mildly derogatory) A person of middling intellect; someone who is neither particularly dumb nor notably intelligent, especially if they act as if they are smarter than they are.
- 2022 January 7, Merri, “Brief Genealogy of the Midwit”, in The Pillarist[1]:
- At no point in this process does the midwit have to review information for himself or consider ideas in abstract. […] How then should we not be midwits? Painting with broad strokes: avoid media. Cultivate taste. Grow and train your sense of aesthetics. Recognize beauty. Practice virtue. Pray.
- 2023 February 11, Janan Ganesh, “After Germany's fall, which is the paragon nation?”, in FT Weekend, page 22:
- A true paragon nation captures the midwit, get-the-news-from-Trevor-Noah demographic.
- 2023 February 21, David Sinclair, The Wolf Tamers: How They Made the Strong Weak[2]:
- Congress is packed with midwits. There are no intellectuals in Congress. None could flourish in such a mediocre environment.
- 2025 May 10, Janan Ganesh, “Why travel didn't bring the world together”, in FT Weekend, Life & Arts, page 19:
- It is still a midwit dinner party applause line that such and such a percentage of Americans don't have passports.
Usage notes
At least online, the term commonly carries connotations of the person deemed a "midwit" of being oversocialized and holding socially-acceptable views as if they were intellectually profound.