Advertisement

precarious (adj.)

1640s, a legal word, "held through the favor of another," from Latin precarius "depending on favor, pertaining to entreaty, obtained by asking or praying," from prex (genitive precis) "entreaty, prayer" (from PIE root *prek- "to ask, entreat").

The notion of "dependent on the will of another" led to the extended sense "risky, dangerous, hazardous, uncertain" (1680s), but this was objected to. "No word is more unskillfully used than this with its derivatives. It is used for uncertain in all its senses; but it only means uncertain, as dependent on others ..." [Johnson]. Related: Precariously; precariousness.

Others are reading

Advertisement
Definitions of precarious from WordNet

precarious (adj.)
affording no ease or reassurance;
a precarious truce
Synonyms: unstable
precarious (adj.)
fraught with danger;
the precarious life of an undersea diver
Synonyms: parlous / perilous / touch-and-go
precarious (adj.)
not secure; beset with difficulties;
Synonyms: shaky
From wordnet.princeton.edu