Advertisement

point-blank (n.)

1570s, in gunnery, "having a horizontal direction," said to be from point (v.) + blank (n.), here meaning the white center of a target. The notion would be of standing close enough to aim (point) at the blank without allowance for curve, windage, or gravity.

But early references make no mention of a white target, and the phrase is possibly from a simplification of the French phrase de pointe en blanc, used in French gunnery in reference to firing a piece on the level into open space to test how far it will carry. In that case the blank represents "empty space" or perhaps the "zero point" of elevation. The whole phrase might be a French loan-translation from Italian.

From 1590s as an adjective in English. The transferred meaning "direct, blunt, straight, without circumlocution" is from 1650s.

Others are reading

Advertisement
Definitions of point-blank from WordNet
1
point-blank (adj.)
characterized by directness in manner or speech; without subtlety or evasion;
a point-blank accusation
Synonyms: blunt / candid / forthright / frank / free-spoken / outspoken / plainspoken / straight-from-the-shoulder
point-blank (adj.)
close enough to go straight to the target;
point-blank range
a point-blank shot
2
point-blank (adv.)
in a direct and unequivocal manner;
I asked him point-blank whether he wanted the job
From wordnet.princeton.edu