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🗓️ 12 June 2024
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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for June 12, 2024 is:
efficacious • \ef-uh-KAY-shus\ • adjective
Efficacious is a formal word used to describe something—often a treatment, medicine, or remedy—that has the power to produce a desired result or effect.
// Companies like to tout the number of efficacious natural ingredients in their beauty products.
Examples:
“Baking soda is commonly used alongside detergent to fix stinky loads ... but washing soda is the typical go-to for most tough laundry jobs. Baking soda is gentler than washing soda, so it won’t be as efficacious.” — Leslie Corona, Real Simple Magazine, 29 Dec. 2023
Did you know?
If you guesstimate that efficacious is the effect of combining effective with the suffix -ious, you’re on the right track. Efficacious came to English from the Middle French word efficace (or that word’s Latin source, efficāc- or efficāx), meaning “effective.” (These words ultimately trace back to the Latin verb efficere, “to make, bring about, produce, carry out.”) English speakers added -ious to effectively create the word we know today. Efficacious is one of many, er, eff words that mean “producing or capable of producing a result.” Among its synonyms are the familiar adjectives effective and efficient. Efficacious is more formal than either of these; it’s often encountered in medical writing where it describes treatments, therapies, and drugs that produce their desired and intended effects in patients.
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0:00.0 | It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for June 12th. |
0:11.6 | Today's word is efficacious spelled EFFICACASAS. |
0:18.0 | E-F-I-C-I-O-U-S. |
0:18.3 | Effacacious is an adjective. |
0:20.4 | It's a formal word used to describe something often a treatment, medicine, or remedy that has the power to produce a desired result or effect. |
0:29.0 | Here's the word used in a sentence from Real Simple magazine. |
0:34.0 | Baking soda is commonly used alongside detergent to fix stinky loads, |
0:39.0 | but washing soda is the typical go-to for most tough laundry jobs. |
0:44.0 | Baking soda is gentler than washing soda, |
0:46.2 | so it won't be as efficacious. |
0:49.0 | If you guesstimate that the word efficacious |
0:51.7 | is the effect of combining the word effective with the suffix I-O-U-S, you're on the right track. |
0:58.0 | Eficacious came to English from the middle French word, efficacas or that words Latin source Ephikaks |
1:05.8 | meaning effective. These words ultimately trace back to the Latin verb |
1:10.6 | ephicaree meaning to make, bring about, produce, or carry out. |
1:15.0 | English speakers added I-O-U-S to effectively create the word we know today. |
1:21.0 | E-F-C-C-S-E-F-C-S-S-S-S-S is one of many EFF words that mean producing or capable of |
1:27.2 | producing a result. Among its synonyms are the familiar adjectives |
1:31.6 | effective and efficient. |
1:34.0 | Eficacious is more formal than either of these. |
1:37.0 | It's often encountered in medical writing where it describes treatments, therapies, and drugs |
1:42.0 | that produce their desired and intended effects in patients. |
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