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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

aggrandize

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

Merriam-Webster

Arts, Literature, Language Courses, Education

4.31.2K Ratings

🗓️ 5 August 2023

⏱️ 2 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for August 5, 2023 is:

aggrandize • \uh-GRAN-dyze\  • verb

To aggrandize something is to enhance its power, wealth, position, or reputation. Aggrandize can also mean "to increase or enlarge" or "to praise highly."

// Critics of the book argued that the author aggrandizes corrupt politicians.

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Examples:

"By definition and disposition, the spy presents a daunting challenge to the historian. Expected to be elusive and deceptive, secret agents prefer to swallow written evidence, not preserve it. Then, if they survive to write memoirs, they often aggrandize their achievements at the expense of truth." — Harold Holzer, The Wall Street Journal, 2 Aug. 2019

Did you know?

Aggrandize is a grand word, and we don’t just mean that in praise. The word literally traces back to the Latin adjective grandis, meaning "grand," and it has enhanced the English language for over three centuries. Nowadays, aggrandize is often paired with self (either the word or the prefix: to "aggrandize oneself" or to "be self-aggrandizing" is to glorify oneself, or to intently pursue power, wealth, and the like. It's of course great to take pride in a job well done, but we stan those who keep it real—after all, not every hit can be a grand slam.



Transcript

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0:00.0

It's Merriam Webster's Word of the Day for August 5th.

0:11.2

Today's word is aggrandize, spelled A-G-G-R-A-N-D-I-Z-E.

0:18.3

Aggrandize is a verb.

0:20.9

To aggrandize something is to enhance its power, wealth, position, or reputation.

0:26.6

Aggrandize can also mean to increase or enlarge or to praise highly.

0:32.4

Here's the word used in a sentence by Harold Holzer in the Wall Street Journal.

0:36.9

By definition and disposition, the spy presents a daunting challenge to the historian.

0:43.0

Expected to be elusive and deceptive, secret agents prefer to swallow written evidence,

0:48.8

not preserve it.

0:50.2

Then, if they survive to write memoirs, they often aggrandize their achievements

0:55.2

at the expense of truth.

0:58.0

Aggrandize is a grand word, and we don't just mean that in praise.

1:03.7

The word literally traces back to the Latin adjective groundease, meaning grand, and it

1:09.1

has enhanced the English language for over three centuries.

1:12.8

Nowadays, aggrandize is often paired with the word self, either the word or the prefix

1:18.0

that is, as in to aggrandize oneself or to be self aggrandizing, is to glorify oneself

1:25.0

or to intently pursue power, wealth, and the like.

1:28.6

It's of course great to take pride in a job well done, but we stand those who keep it

1:33.8

real.

1:34.8

After all, not every hit can be a grand slam.

1:38.0

With your word of the day, I'm Peter Sokolowski.

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