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🗓️ 14 November 2023
⏱️ 2 minutes
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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for November 14, 2023 is:
exigent • \EK-suh-junt\ • adjective
Exigent is a formal word that describes things that need to be dealt with immediately, as well as people who expect significant time, attention, effort, etc. from other people.
// The warrantless search of the property was permitted because of exigent circumstances.
// He struggled to satisfy the needs of the exigent client.
Examples:
"People don't tend to reveal their true selves while careening across a landscape. Unless, of course, civilization has ended—a cheap setup that, I must begrudgingly admit, motivates character development in an exigent way. The most famous literary and filmic specimen that focuses, as games do, on spatial traversal amid existential threat is Lord of the Rings—which, of course, exerted a strong influence on the development of games in the first place." — Ian Bogost, The Atlantic, 29 Jan. 2023
Did you know?
Exigent is a formal word with meanings closely tied to its Latin forbear, exigere, meaning "to demand." Exigent things and people demand attention—for example, an exigent client expects so much that they are hard to satisfy, and exigent circumstances are so significant that they can be used to justify certain police actions without the warrant typically required. Before exigent joined the language in the early 1600s, the noun exigency was being used to refer to something that is necessary in a particular situation—for example, the exigencies of an emergency situation might require that certain usual precautions be ignored. That word dates to the late 1500s, but even earlier, in the mid-1400s, exigence was on the scene doing the same job. All three words—exigent, exigency, and exigence—continue to meet the demands of English users, albeit not frequently in everyday conversation.
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0:00.0 | It's Merriam-Webster's word of the day for November 14th. |
0:11.0 | Today's word is exigent, also pronounced exigent, and spelled EX I G-E-N-T. |
0:19.2 | Exigent is an adjective, a formal word that describes things that need to be dealt with immediately, as well as people |
0:26.8 | who expect significant time, attention, effort, or something else from others. |
0:37.0 | Here's the word used in a sentence from the Atlantic by Ian Bogost. People don't tend to reveal their true selves while careening across a landscape. |
0:42.0 | Unless of course civilization has ended. yourselves while careening across a landscape. |
0:43.0 | Unless of course civilization has ended, a cheap setup that I must begrudgingly admit, motivates |
0:49.2 | character development in an exigent way. The most famous literary and filmic specimen that focuses as |
0:56.3 | games do on spatial traversal amid existential threat is Lord of the Rings, which of course exerted a strong influence on the development of games in the first place. |
1:08.0 | Exigent is a formal word with meanings closely tied to its Latin forebear exigore meaning to demand. |
1:17.0 | Exigent things and people demand attention. |
1:20.0 | For example, an exigent client expects so much that they are hard to satisfy, |
1:25.0 | and exigent circumstances are so significant that they can be used to justify certain police actions |
1:32.0 | without the warrant typically required. |
1:35.6 | Before Exigent joined the language in the early 1600s, the noun Exigency was being used to refer |
1:42.3 | to something that is necessary in a particular situation. |
1:46.0 | For example, the exigencies of an emergency situation might require that certain usual precautions be ignored. |
1:55.0 | That word dates to the late 1500s, |
1:58.0 | but even earlier in the mid 1400s, |
2:00.0 | exigence was on the scene doing the same job. All three words, |
2:05.0 | exigent, exigency, and exigence |
2:08.0 | continue to meet the demands of English users, |
... |
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