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🗓️ 22 November 2023
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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for November 22, 2023 is:
boilerplate • \BOY-ler-playt\ • noun
Boilerplate is a noun that refers to standard or formulaic language, a meaning that comes from an earlier meaning still in use: syndicated material supplied to newspapers in matrix or plate form. Boilerplate can also refer to tightly packed snow.
// The last paragraph of the contract was legal boilerplate.
Examples:
"For years, the trolley driver has been putting his own spin on the T’s boilerplate announcements, playing with cadence and pitch, recommending his favorite anime, and cheering on Boston sports teams." — Daniel Kool, The Boston Globe, 15 Sept. 2023
Did you know?
In the days before computers, small newspapers around the U.S. relied heavily on feature stories, editorials, and other printed material supplied by large publishing syndicates. The syndicates delivered that copy on metal plates with the type already in place so the local papers wouldn't have to set it. Printers apparently dubbed those syndicated plates "boiler plates" because of their resemblance to the plating used in making steam boilers. Soon boilerplate came to refer to the printed material on the plates as well as to the plates themselves. Because boilerplate stories were often more filler—material used to fill extra space in a column or page of a newspaper to increase its size—than important or informative news, the word acquired negative connotations and gained the "standardized or formulaic language" sense widely used today.
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0:00.0 | It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for November 22nd. |
0:11.0 | Today's word is boilerplate, spelled as one word, B-O-B-A-B-B-B-A-B-T-E-E-L-E-T-E-E-N-Noun. It refers to a standard or formulaic language, a meaning that comes from an earlier |
0:26.6 | meaning still in use, syndicated material supplied to newspapers in matrix or plate form. |
0:33.7 | Boiler plate can also refer to tightly packed snow. |
0:38.2 | Here's the word used in a sentence from the Boston Globe |
0:41.2 | by Daniel Kuhl. For years, the trolley driver has been. the and |
0:53.0 | cheering on Boston Sports teams. |
0:55.0 | In the days before computers, |
0:58.0 | small newspapers around the U.S. |
1:00.0 | relied heavily on feature stories, |
1:02.0 | editorials, and other printed material supplied by large publishing |
1:06.4 | syndicates. |
1:07.9 | The syndicates delivered that copy on metal plates with the type already in place so the local papers wouldn't have to |
1:15.2 | set it. Printers apparently dubbed those syndicated plates boiler plates because of |
1:21.4 | their resemblance to the plating used in making steam boilers. |
1:25.7 | Soon boiler plate came to refer to the printed material on the plates as well as to the plates |
1:31.6 | themselves. |
1:33.0 | Because boilerplate stories were often more filler, |
1:36.0 | material used to fill extra space in a column or page of a newspaper |
1:40.0 | to increase its size, |
1:42.0 | then important or informative news, the word acquired |
1:46.1 | negative connotations and gained the standardized or formulaic language sense widely used today. |
... |
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