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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

deus ex machina

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

Merriam-Webster

Arts, Literature, Language Courses, Education

4.31.2K Ratings

🗓️ 14 January 2025

⏱️ 2 minutes

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Summary

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for January 14, 2025 is:

deus ex machina • \DAY-us-eks-MAH-kih-nuh\  • noun

A deus ex machina is a character or thing that suddenly enters the story in a novel, play, movie, etc., and solves a problem that had previously seemed impossible to solve.

// The introduction of a new love interest in the final act was the perfect deus ex machina for the main character's happy ending.

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Examples:

"The poultry thieves in Emma provide a particularly humorous example of deus ex machina: the arrival of a poultry thief into the surrounding area (on the penultimate page of the novel, no less) and his theft of Mrs. Weston’s turkeys frightens Mr. Woodhouse enough to consent to Emma’s marriage and to allow Mr. Knightley to move into Hartfield." — Inger Sigrun Bredkjær Brodey, Jane Austen & the Price of Happiness, 2024

Did you know?

The New Latin term deus ex machina is a translation of a Greek phrase and means literally "a god from a machine." Machine, in this case, refers to the crane (yes, crane) that held a god over the stage in ancient Greek and Roman drama. The practice of introducing a god at the end of a play to unravel and resolve the plot dates from at least the 5th century B.C.; Euripides (circa 484-406 B.C.) was one playwright who made frequent use of the device. Since the late 1600s, deus ex machina has been applied in English to unlikely saviors and improbable events in fiction or drama that bring order out of chaos in sudden and surprising ways.



Transcript

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0:00.0

It's the Word of the Day for January 14th.

0:09.0

Today's word is Deus X Machina, spelled as three words as they would be in Latin,

0:17.0

D-E-U-S-E-U-S-E-X-M-A-C-H-I-N-A.

0:23.5

Deus Ex Machina is a noun.

0:25.8

A Deus Ex Machina is a character or thing that suddenly enters the story in a novel play or movie

0:31.6

and solves a problem that had previously seemed impossible to solve.

0:36.5

Here's the word used in a sentence from Jane Austen

0:39.4

and The Price of Happiness. The poultry thieves in Emma provide a particularly humorous example

0:45.8

of deus ex machina, the arrival of a poultry thief into the surrounding area on the

0:51.7

penultimate page of the novel, no less, and his theft of Mrs. Weston's

0:56.3

turkeys frightens Mr. Woodhouse enough to consent to Emma's marriage and to allow Mr. Knightley

1:03.1

to move into Hartfield.

1:05.7

The new Latin term deus ex machina is a translation of a Greek phrase that means literally a god from a machine.

1:15.2

Machine in this case refers to the crane, yes the crane, that held a god over the stage in ancient

1:22.0

Greek and Roman drama. The practice of introducing a god at the end of a play to unravel and resolve the plot

1:30.0

dates from at least the 5th century BC. Euripides was one playwright who made frequent use of the device.

1:38.6

Since the late 1600s, Deus X Machina has been applied in English to unlikely saviors and improbable events in fiction or drama

1:47.9

that bring order out of chaos in sudden and surprising ways.

1:52.7

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

1:58.9

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