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🗓️ 16 May 2024
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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for May 16, 2024 is:
debacle • \dee-BAH-kul\ • noun
Debacle is usually used synonymously with fiasco to mean “a complete failure.” It can also refer to a great disaster (though typically not one that causes significant suffering or loss).
// After the debacle of his first novel, he had trouble getting a publisher for his next book.
// The state has made a great deal of progress in recovering from its economic debacle.
Examples:
“Earlier this year, on an Amtrak train from Northern Virginia to Sanford, Florida, passengers repeatedly called the police during the train’s 20-hour delay. ‘For those of you that are calling the police,’ the conductor had to announce, ‘we are not holding you hostage.’ That debacle was caused by a freight train ahead of them, which had crashed into an empty car parked on the tracks in rural South Carolina. Nothing you can do about that. A train just has to wait until whatever’s in front of it is gone.” — Kaitlyn Tiffany, The Atlantic, 21 Nov. 2023
Did you know?
If you need an icebreaker in some social setting, why not recount the history of debacle? After all, when it was first used in English, debacle referred to the literal breaking up of ice (such as the kind that occurs in a river after a long, cold winter), as well as to the rush of ice or water that follows such an event. Eventually, it was also used to mean “a violent, destructive flood.” If that’s not enough to make some fast friends, you could let loose the fact that debacle comes from the French noun débâcle, which in turn comes from the verb débâcler, meaning “to clear, unbolt, or unbar.” You might then add, to your listeners’ grateful appreciation, that these uses led naturally to such meanings as “a breaking up,” “collapse,” and finally the familiar “disaster” and “fiasco.” We can feel the silence thawing already.
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0:00.0 | It's Merriam-Webster's word of the day for May 16th. |
0:07.0 | Today's word is today's word is, debaukel, also pronounced debaukel and spelled D.E. B. A.C. |
0:18.0 | E. E. A. C. E. Debocle is a noun. |
0:20.0 | It's usually used synonymously with the word fiasco to mean a complete failure. |
0:26.0 | It can also refer to a great disaster, though typically not one that causes significant suffering or loss. |
0:32.0 | Here's the word used in a sentence from the Atlantic by Caitlin Tiffany. |
0:36.0 | Earlier this year on an Amtrak train from Northern Virginia to Sanford Florida, |
0:41.0 | passengers repeatedly called the police during the train's 20-hour |
0:45.1 | delay. |
0:46.4 | For those of you that are calling the police, the conductor had to announce, we are not holding |
0:51.1 | you hostage. That debacle was caused by a freight train ahead of them |
0:56.0 | which had crashed into an empty car parked on the tracks in rural South Carolina. |
1:01.0 | Nothing you can do about that. A train just has to wait until |
1:05.1 | whatever's in front of it is gone. If you need an icebreaker in some social |
1:10.2 | setting, why not recount the history of the word Debekele? |
1:14.0 | After all, when it was first used in English, Debekele referred to the literal breaking up of |
1:19.2 | ice, such as the kind that occurs in a river after a long cold winter, as well as to the |
1:25.0 | to the rush of ice or water that follows such an event. |
1:29.0 | Eventually, it was also used to mean a violent destructive flood. If that's not enough to make you |
1:34.9 | some fast friends, you could let loose the fact that DeBucal comes from the |
1:40.2 | French noun de Bacre which in turn comes from the verb de Bakle meaning to clear |
1:46.1 | unbolt or unbar you might then add to your listener's grateful appreciation that these |
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