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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

bastion

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

Merriam-Webster

Arts, Literature, Language Courses, Education

4.31.2K Ratings

🗓️ 23 May 2025

⏱️ 3 minutes

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Summary

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for May 23, 2025 is:

bastion • \BAS-chun\  • noun

A bastion is a place or system in which something (such as an idea) is protected and continues to survive.

// The restaurant is a bastion of the region’s ancient culinary traditions.

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Examples:

“In 2017, Harlem residents took to the streets to protest Keller Williams after the real estate company began marketing the neighborhood’s 15-block southern radius (between 110th Street and 125th Street) as ‘SoHa’ (South Harlem) without their approval. The biggest worry? That newcomers would attempt to erase Harlem’s history as a civil rights nexus and bastion of Black American culture. In response, then-New York Sen. Brian Benjamin introduced legislation that banned unsolicited name changes and fined real estate firms for using names like SoHa.” — Jake Kring-Schreifels, Spokeo, 26 Mar. 2025

Did you know?

Bastion today usually refers to a metaphorical fortress, a place where an idea, ethos, philosophy, culture, etc. is in some way protected and able to endure. But its oldest meaning concerned literal fortifications and strongholds. Bastion likely traces back to a verb, bastir, meaning “to build or weave,” from Old Occitan, a Romance language spoken in southern France from about 1100 to 1500. Bastir eventually led to bastia, an Italian word for a small quadrangular fortress, and from there bastione, referring to a part of a fortified structure—such as an outer wall—that juts or projects outward. Bastione became bastion in Middle French before entering English with the same meaning. You may be familiar with another bastir descendent, bastille, which refers generically to a prison or jail, but is best known as the name of the Parisian fortress-turned-prison stormed by an angry mob at the start of the French Revolution; the Bastille’s fall is commemorated in France by the national holiday Bastille Day.



Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

It's the Word of the Day for May 23rd.

0:11.4

Today's word is Bastion, also pronounced Bastion, and spelled B-A-S-T-I-O-N.

0:18.1

Bastion is a noun.

0:19.5

It's a place or system in which something such as an idea is protected

0:23.3

and continues to survive. Here's the word used in a sentence from Spokio. In 2017, Harlem residents

0:30.9

took to the streets to protest Keller Williams after the real estate company began marketing

0:36.2

the neighborhood's 15-block southern radius

0:39.3

between 110th Street and 125th Street as Soha, South Harlem, without their approval.

0:47.3

The biggest worry, that newcomers would attempt to erase Harlem's history as a civil rights nexus

0:53.3

and bastion of black American culture.

0:56.3

In response, then New York Senator Brian Benjamin introduced legislation that banned unsolicited

1:02.8

name changes and find real estate firms for using names like Soha.

1:08.8

The word bastion today usually refers to a metaphorical fortress, a place

1:14.5

where an idea, ethos, or philosophy is in some way protected and able to endure. But its oldest

1:22.3

meaning concerned literal fortifications and strongholds. Bastion likely traces back to a verb Bastille,

1:30.6

meaning to build or weave from old Occitan, a romance language spoken in southern France, from about

1:36.7

1,100 to 1,100. Bastille eventually led to Bastia, an Italian word for a small quadrangular fortress,

1:46.8

and from there Bastione, referring to a part of a fortified structure,

1:52.2

such as an outer wall that juts or projects outward.

1:56.6

Bastione became Bastion in Middle French before entering English with the same meaning.

2:02.6

You may be familiar with another Bastille,

2:05.6

or Bastille, which refers generically to a prison or jail,

...

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