Explanation

  • To accept something (like a statement, appearance, or offer) exactly as it appears or is presented, without questioning it, doubting it, or looking for a hidden meaning or ulterior motive.

Origin

  • Direct application of the concept face value (see 1288).
  • To take something at its face value is to accept its apparent worth or meaning as the complete and true one.

Alternatives

Slang/Informal:

  • Just go with it.
  • Not overthink it.

Implying Naivety:

  • Swallow it hook, line, and sinker. (Believe a deception completely)
  • Be taken in.
  • Fall for it.

Formal:

  • Accept something uncritically.
  • Grant prima facie acceptance.

Situational Appropriateness

  • Appropriate in most contexts, formal and informal.

Misunderstanding Warnings

  • Same as for face value. Ensure the metaphorical meaning (accepting the surface meaning without question) is clear, not related to a literal face.

Examples

  • He seemed very sincere, so I decided to take his promise at face value.
  • You shouldn't always take online reviews at face value; some might be fake.
  • She's very literal-minded and tends to take everything at face value.

Dialogue

Jordan: The salesman offered me a 'lifetime guarantee' on this watch.

Kim: Hmm, I'd be careful about taking that at face value. Read the fine print – 'lifetime' often means the expected lifetime of the product, not *your* lifetime.

Jordan: Ah, good tip. Thanks.

Social Media Examples

  • Advice tweet: Be critical of news sources. Don't just take headlines at face value. #CriticalThinking
  • Blog post: Learning not to take criticism at face value. Separate constructive feedback from baseless negativity.
  • Comment: Sometimes people are just straightforward. It's okay to take things at face value occasionally.

Response Patterns

  • This phrase describes an action or tendency, so direct responses vary greatly with context.
  • If someone advises *against* taking something at face value: Good point, Why do you say that?
  • If someone states they *did* take it at face value: Okay, Were you right to? Oh dear. (if it implies naivety).

Common Follow-up Questions/Actions

When someone advises *against* taking something at face value:

  • The listener usually probes for the reason (What makes you suspicious?).

When someone says they *are* taking something at face value:

  • They proceed based on the superficial understanding, without further digging (which might be appropriate or naive depending on the situation).

Conversation Starter

  • No. Describes an approach to interpreting information within a conversation.

Intonation

  • Generally neutral. Emphasis can be on take and face. TAKE it at FACE value.

Generation Differences

  • Standard phrase used across all adult generations.

Regional Variations

  • Standard phrase in all major English-speaking regions.
Face value