The word for today is…
mot juste (noun) – Exactly the right word or expression.
Source : The Free Dictionary
Etymology : English was apparently unable to come up with its own mot juste to refer to a word or phrase that expresses exactly what the writer or speaker is trying to say, and so borrowed the French term instead. The borrowing was still very new when George Paston (the pen name of Emily Morse Symonds) described a character’s wordsmithery in her 1899 novel A Writer’s Life thusly: “She could launch her sentences into the air, knowing that they would fall upon their feet like cats, her brain was almost painlessly delivered of le mot juste….” As English speakers became more familiar with the term, they increasingly gave it the English article the instead of the French le.
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The Good Oil Word of the Day
The word for today is… inflection (noun) - 1: change in pitch or loudness of the voice 2a: the change of form that words undergo to mark such distinctions as those of case, gender, number, tense, person, mood, or voice b: a form, suffix, or element involved in such variation c:
The Good Oil Daily Bible Verse
If there be a controversy between men, and they come unto judgment, that the judges may judge them; then they shall justify the righteous, and condemn the wicked.
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