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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

antic

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

Merriam-Webster

Arts, Literature, Language Courses, Education

4.3 • 1.2K Ratings

🗓️ 6 July 2025

⏱️ 2 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for July 6, 2025 is:

antic • \AN-tik\  • noun

Antic refers to an attention-drawing, often wildly playful or funny act or action. It is usually used in its plural form, and is often used disapprovingly.

// It wasn't clear which students were ultimately responsible for the antics that unfolded in the cafeteria that day.

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Examples:

“A couple of adult gorillas, including one majestic silverback, lay indolently on the ground—seemingly reveling in the early morning sunshine, while a pair of young gorillas tumbled down from a mound and played together on the muddy earth. It was remarkable to see how similar they are to humans. They live in family groups and their movements, antics and expressions are so like ours. In fact, data shows that humans and gorillas differ in only 1.75 per cent of their DNA, far less than previously assumed. (Chimpanzees—our closest relatives—differ only 1.37 per cent from our genomes.)” — Zeineb Badawi, An African History of Africa: From the Dawn of Humanity to Independence, 2025

Did you know?

When referring to one of the grotesques—the fanciful, often fantastical mural paintings found in the ruins of ancient Roman buildings—the Italian descendants of the ancient Romans used the word antico, meaning “ancient thing.” In 16th-century English, antico (itself a descendant of the Latin word for “ancient,” antiquus) became antic, and got applied as both a noun and an adjective in contexts related to decorative art—sculptures, painting, architecture, etc.—inspired by the original grotesques. Antic shifted in meaning over time, eventually gaining the senses we use more often today: antic as an adjective describes the absurd or whimsical, and antic as a usually plural noun refers to attention-grabbing, playful or funny acts and actions.



Transcript

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0:00.0

It's the Word of the Day podcast for July 6th.

0:12.0

Today's word is Antic, spelled A-N-T-I-C.

0:16.0

Antic is a noun. It refers to an attention drawing, often wildly playful or funny act or action.

0:23.1

It's usually used in its plural form and is often used disapprovingly.

0:27.7

Here's the word used in a sentence from an African history of Africa from the dawn of humanity

0:33.6

to independence. A couple of adult guerrillas, including one majestic silverback, lay indolently

0:40.7

on the ground, seemingly reveling in the early morning sunshine, while a pair of young

0:46.1

gorillas tumbled down from a mound and played together on the muddy earth. It was remarkable

0:52.6

to see how similar they are to humans. They live in family

0:56.3

groups, and their movements, antics, and expressions are so like ours. In fact, data shows that

1:03.6

humans and gorillas differ in only 1.75% of their DNA, far less than previously assumed.

1:13.8

When referring to one of the grotesques,

1:19.8

the fanciful, often fantastical mural paintings found in the ruins of ancient Roman buildings,

1:26.1

the Italian descendants of the ancient Romans used the word antico, meaning ancient thing.

1:30.6

In 16th century English, antico, itself a descendant of the Latin word for ancient, anticoos, became antic and got applied as both a noun and an adjective

1:38.1

in contexts related to decorative art, sculptures, painting, architecture, etc., inspired by the original grotesques.

1:46.4

Antic shifted in meaning over time,

1:48.6

eventually gaining the senses we use more often today.

1:52.1

Antic as an adjective describes the absurd or whimsical,

1:55.5

and Antic, as a usually plural noun,

1:58.2

refers to attention-grabbing, playful, or funny acts and actions.

2:02.2

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

...

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