Episodios
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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 12, 2025 is:
multifarious \mul-tuh-FAIR-ee-us\ adjective
Something described as multifarious has great diversity or variety, or is made up of many and various kinds of things. Multifarious is a formal word and a synonym of diverse.
// He participated in multifarious activities throughout college.
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Examples:
"Over the course of his multifarious career, [musician Pat] Metheny has led numerous bands, more than a few of whose members later became band leaders in their own right." â George Varga, The San Diego Union-Tribune, 26 Oct. 2023
Did you know?
Before the late 16th-century appearance of multifarious, English speakers used another word similar in form and meaning: multifary, meaning "in many ways," appearedâand disappearedâin the 15th century. Before either of the English words existed, there was the Medieval Latin word multifarius, from the Latin adverb multifariam, meaning "in many places." Multi-, as you may know, means "many," and is used to form, well, multifarious English words, from multicultural to multimillion. The word omnifarious ("of all varieties, forms, or kinds"), a relative of multifarious, is created with omni- ("all") rather than multi-.
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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 11, 2025 is:
quark \KWORK\ noun
Quark is a word used in physics to refer to any one of several types of very small particles that make up matter.
// Quarks, which combine together to form protons and neutrons, come in six types, or flavors: up, down, charm, strange, top, and bottom.
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Examples:
âOne quantum field is special because its default value can change. Called the Higgs field, it controls the mass of many fundamental particles, like electrons and quarks. Unlike every other quantum field physicists have discovered, the Higgs field has a default value above zero. Dialing the Higgs field value up or down would increase or decrease the mass of electrons and other particles. If the setting of the Higgs field were zero, those particles would be massless.â â Matt Von Hippel, Wired, 19 Aug. 2024
Did you know?
If you were a physics major, chances are that James Joyce didnât make it onto your syllabus. While literature majors are likely more familiar with his work, Joyce has a surprising tie to physics. In the early 1960s, American physicist Murray Gell-Man came up with the word quork, which he used to refer to his concept of an elementary particle smaller than a proton or neutron (by his own account he was in the habit of using names like âsqueakâ and âsquorkâ for peculiar objects). He later settled on the spelling quark after reading a line from James Joyceâs Finnegans Wake: âThree quarks for Muster Mark! / Sure he has not got much of a bark / And sure any he has itâs all beside the mark.â The name stuck and has been used by physicists ever since.
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¿Faltan episodios?
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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 10, 2025 is:
imperturbable \im-per-TER-buh-bul\ adjective
Imperturbable describes someone or something marked by extreme calm; such a person or thing is very hard to disturb or upset.
// The imperturbable captain did not panic when the boat sailed into the path of a violent storm.
// Nothing disrupted the contestant's imperturbable focus.
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Examples:
"The thick heat is not letting up after a long stretch of nearly-90-degree-days, though the crowd has not seemed to notice. Instead, these thousands of people emanate a truly imperturbable energy as they get to see gospel legend Mavis Staples for free." â David Cohn, The Daily Californian (UC Berkeley), 13 Oct. 2024
Did you know?
Imperturbable is a bit of a mouthful, but donât let its five syllables perturb you. Instead, let us break it down: this word, as well as its antonym perturbable, comes from the Latin verb perturbare, meaning "to agitate, trouble, or throw into confusion." Perturbare comes in turn from the combination of per-, meaning "thoroughly," and turbare, meaning "to disturb"; unsurprisingly perturbare is also the source of the English verb perturb. Other perturbare descendants include disturb ("to destroy the tranquility or composure of") and turbid ("thick or opaque with or as if with roiled sediment").
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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 9, 2025 is:
wend \WEND\ verb
Wend is a literary word that means âto move slowly from one place to another usually by a winding or indirect courseâ; wending is traveling or proceeding on oneâs way in such a manner.
// Hikers wend along the marked trails to the top of the mountain, which provides a panoramic view of the area towns.
// We wended our way through the narrow streets of the cityâs historic quarter.
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Examples:
âOtters do not like to share food.... There is a ïŹickering movement of jaws before they swallow and dive again. For a moment I think they have left, then they surface once more and I make out two long shapes, one just ahead of the other. They wend their way further down the waterway before insinuating themselves back into the dark.â â Miriam Darlington, Otter Country: In Search of the Wild Otter, 2024
Did you know?
âOut through the fields and woods / And over the walls I have wended âŠâ So wrote poet Robert Frost in âReluctance,â using the wordâs familiar sense of âto direct oneâs course.â By the time of the poemâs publication in 1913, many other senses of wend had wended their way into and out of popular English usage including âto change direction,â âto change someoneâs mind,â âto transform into something else,â and âto turn (a shipâs head) in tacking.â All of that turning is linked to the wordâs Old English ancestor, wendan, which shares roots with the Old English verb, windan, meaning âto twistâ (windan is also the ancestor of the English verb wind as in âthe river winds through the valleyâ). Wend is also to thank for lending the English verb go its past tense form went (as a past tense form of wend, went has long since been superseded by wended).
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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 8, 2025 is:
gregarious \grih-GAIR-ee-us\ adjective
Gregarious is used to describe someone who enjoys the company of other people.
// Justinâs gregarious personality made it easy for him to get to know people at the networking event.
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Examples:
âHow can we reap the benefits of deep connection if we are not naturally gregarious and extroverted? But as I have delved into the evidence, I have discovered that our social skills are like our musclesâthe more we use them, the stronger they become. Even self-declared introverts can learn to be more sociable, if they wish.â â David Robson, BBC, 23 July 2024
Did you know?
Everyone knows that birds of a feather flock together, so it comes as no surprise that gregarious was applied mainly to animals when it first began appearing in English texts in the 17th century. After all, gregarious comes from the Latin noun grex, meaning âflockâ or âherd,â and itâs tough to avoid being social when youâre part of a flock, flying and roosting cheek by jowl (or beak) with your fellow feathered friends. Take starlings, for example, which congregate in massive numbersâwe define the word starling as âany of a family of usually dark gregarious birds,â meaning that starlings are inclined to associate with others of their kind. By the 18th century gregarious was being used to describe social human beings as well, be they chatty Cathys or convivial Connors who relish being in the company of others.
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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 7, 2025 is:
emollient \ih-MAHL-yunt\ noun
An emollient is something, such as a lotion, that softens or soothes.
// She keeps a number of oils in the bathroomâargan, almond, and coconutâto use as emollients.
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Examples:
"Jojoba oil and squalene are plant oils and emollients, which means they moisturize and soften skin by reinforcing its natural barrier and forming a layer that prevents moisture from escaping; beef tallow is considered an emollient, too." â Katie Mogg, The New York Times, 18 July 2024
Did you know?
The noun emollient is used most often in reference to a substanceâsuch as an oil, cream, lotion, butter, or balmâused to treat someone's skin or hair. Perhaps unsurprisingly, it traces back to a Latin word, the verb emollire, meaning "to soften or soothe." Emollire, in turn, formed in part from the adjective mollis, meaning "soft." (Another descendant of mollis is mollify, which means "to make softer in temper or disposition.") Emollient first appeared in print in English in the early 1600s as an adjective with the meaning "making soft or supple," describing things such as herbs, medicines, and poultices; the noun arrived on the scene soon after.
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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 6, 2025 is:
career \kuh-REER\ verb
To career is to go at top speed especially in a headlong manner.
// The tourists gripped their seats and exchanged anxious looks as the bus careered along the narrow roads.
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Examples:
âThis winter, I attended a livestock auction on Californiaâs remote northern coast. Ranchers sat on plywood bleachers warming their hands as the auctioneer mumble-chanted and handlers flushed cows into a viewing paddock one by one. Most of the cows were hale animals, careering in and cantering out.â â Annie Lowrey, The Atlantic, 12 Apr. 2024
Did you know?
If youâre already familiar with careerâs equestrian history, surely you joust. The noun career dates to the early 16th century, when it referred to the speed of something moving along a particular course. To go âin full careerâ or âat full careerâ was to hurtle, barrel, blaze, or zip, a meaning employed by Sir Walter Scott in a jousting scene in his historical romance Ivanhoe: âThe trumpets sounded, and the knights charged each other in full career.â The verb career thus originally conveyed the action of a horse or rider making a short gallop or charge, as when the very aptly named John Speed wrote in his 1611 Historie of Great Britain âhis horse of a fierce courage carrierd [=careered] as he went.â Career later gained additional senses applied to the movement of horses, such as âto prance or caracoleâ (âto turn to one side and another in runningâ), as well as oneââto rush forward quickly and recklesslyââthat can be applied to anything or anyone feeling their oats, velocity-wise. Note that careen can also be used with that last meaning, but it originally meant something else.
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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 5, 2025 is:
askew \uh-SKYOO\ adjective
Askew means ânot straightâ or âat an angle,â and can be used as both an adjective and an adverb.
// The picture on the cabin wall was slightly askew.
// The picture was hung askew on the cabin wall.
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Examples:
âI reread âBiography of Nigeriaâs Foremost Professor of Statistics, Prof. James Nwoye Adichie,â by Emeritus Professor Alex Animalu, Professor Peter I. Uche, and Jeff Unaegbu, published in 2013, three years before my father was made professor emeritus of the University of Nigeria. The printing is uneven, the pages slightly askew, but I feel a euphoric rush of gratitude to the authors. Why does this lineââthe children and I adore himââfrom my motherâs tribute soothe me so; why does it feel pacifying and prophetic? It pleases me that it exists, forever declared in print.â â Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, The New Yorker, 10 Sept. 2020
Did you know?
If you watch enough nature documentaries you may notice that gazelles are able to escape the claws (and, subsequently, jaws) of cheetahs when they zigzag across the savannah rather than simply run in a straight line. In Middle English, prey outmaneuvering a predator in this way might be said to be âskewing.â Skew means both âto take an oblique courseâ (as it does in modern English too) as well as âto escape,â and comes from the Anglo-French word eschiver, meaning âto escape or avoid.â Itâs this skew, with its suggestion of crooked lines, that forms the basis of the adjective askew (the prefix a- means âin [such] a state or conditionâ). Askew is used as both an adjective and an adverb to describe things or actions that are a little off, not straight, or at an angle. The âescapeâ sense of the Middle English skew isnât so much implied by askew, but we suppose that a painting hanging askew on oneâs wall could be, metaphorically speaking, attempting to escape from the rest of the dĂ©cor.
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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 4, 2025 is:
schadenfreude \SHAH-dun-froy-duh\ noun
Schadenfreude refers to a feeling of enjoyment that comes from seeing or hearing about the troubles of other people.
// Schadenfreude was felt by many viewers when the arrogant contestant was voted off the show.
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Examples:
âIn 1995, Sox fans were overjoyed to see the Yankees get knocked out of the playoffs in a thrilling divisional series.... It was Boston schadenfreude, to be sure ...â â Chris Young, The Sun Chronicle (Attleboro, Massachusetts), 13 Sep. 2024
Did you know?
Ever a popular lookup on our site, schadenfreude refers to the joy you might feel at another personâs pain. Itâs a compound of the German nouns Schaden, meaning âdamage,â and Freude, meaning âjoy.â Schadenfreude was a favored subject in Germany by the time it was introduced to English in the mid-1800s; discussed by the likes of Schopenhauer, Kant, and Nietzsche, schadenfreude was showing up in psychology books, literature for children, and critical theory. In English, the word was used mostly by academics until the early 1990s, when it was introduced to more general audiences via pop culture. In a 1991 episode of The Simpsons, for example, Lisa explains schadenfreude to Homer, who is gloating at his neighborâs failure; she also tells him that the opposite of schadenfreude is sour grapes. âBoy,â he marvels, âthose Germans have a word for everything.â
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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 3, 2025 is:
draconian \dray-KOH-nee-un\ adjective
Draconian describes something (often a law, policy, restriction, etc.) that is very severe or cruel.
// The editorial criticizes the draconian measures being taken by city hall to rein in spending.
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Examples:
âThe auras that surround the Sharks and the Hawks are wildly distinct, even if the teamsâ records are close to the same. To put it in Chicago terms, one team has the vibe of a Ferris Bueller (plays hooky, joins random parades, chicks dig him)âand the other is, Iâm sorry to say, increasingly Principal Rooneyâesque (grim faced, tightly wound, represents a draconian institution).â â Katie Baker, The Ringer, 15 Jan. 2025
Did you know?
Draconian comes from DrakĆn, the name (later Latinized as Draco) of a 7th-century B.C. Athenian legislator who created a written code of law. DrakĆnâs code was intended to clarify existing laws, but its severity is what made it really memorable. According to the code, even minor offenses were punishable by death, and failure to pay one's debts could result in slavery. Draconian, as a result, is used especially for authoritarian actions that are viewed as cruel or harsh.