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🗓️ 23 April 2024
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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for April 23, 2024 is:
exodus • \EK-suh-dus\ • noun
An exodus is a situation in which many people leave a place at the same time—in other words a mass departure or emigration.
// The resort town eagerly anticipated the mass exodus from the cities to its beaches as summer approached.
Examples:
“Experts link lower rents to a possible drop in demand after population losses during a recent exodus from parts of Southern California. As the state’s population has stagnated, some believe demand may cool and dampen rent growth.” — Anthony de Leon, The Los Angeles Times, 14 Mar. 2024
Did you know?
The Biblical book of Exodus describes the departure of the Israelites from Egypt, so it's no surprise that the word exodus, uncapitalized, has come to refer more generally to any mass departure. Exodus was adopted into English (via Latin) from the Greek word Exodos, which literally means “the road out.” Exodos was formed by combining the prefix ex-, meaning “out of,” and hodos, meaning “road” or “way.” Indeed, many roads led out of hodos into English; other hodos descendants include episode, method, odometer, and period. While exodus is occasionally encountered in reference to an individual’s leaving (e.g., “his/her/their exodus”), such usage is likely to raise the eyebrows of editors who feel it should only refer to the departure en masse of a large group of people, as when novelist Nnedi Okorafor writes in her science fiction novel Lagoon (2015): “Everyone was trying to get somewhere, be it a church, a bar, home or out of Lagos. Then there was the exodus of people … to the parts of the city that had the least chance of flooding if the water rose too high.”
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0:00.0 | It's Mary and Webster's word of the day for April 23rd. |
0:07.0 | Today's word is |
0:12.0 | Exodus, spelled E-X-O-D-U-S. |
0:16.1 | Exodus is a noun. |
0:17.8 | An Exodus is a situation in which many people leave a place at the same time. |
0:22.4 | In other words, a mass departure or emigration. |
0:25.4 | Here's the word used in a sentence from the Los Angeles Times. |
0:29.2 | Experts link lower rents to a possible drop in demand after population losses during a recent |
0:36.2 | exodus from parts of Southern California. |
0:39.7 | As the state's population has stagnated, some believe demand may cool and dampen rent growth. |
0:47.5 | The biblical book of exodus describes the departure of the Israelites from Egypt, So it's no surprise that the word exodus, uncapitalized, |
0:55.8 | has come to refer more generally to any mass departure. |
0:59.7 | Exodus was adopted into English via Latin from the Greek word exodos, |
1:05.0 | which literally means the road out. |
1:08.0 | Exodos was formed by combining the prefix X, meaning out of, |
1:12.0 | and Hodos meaning road or way. Indeed many roads |
1:16.9 | lead out of Hodos into English. Other Hodos descendants include episode, method, odometer, and period. |
1:26.7 | While Exodus is occasionally encountered in reference to an individual's leaving, as in his or her |
1:32.4 | or their exodus, such usage is likely to raise the |
1:36.1 | eyebrows of editors who feel it should only refer to the departure en masse of a large group of people, as when novelist Nettie Okoraphore writes in her science fiction novel |
1:46.7 | Lagoon, everyone was trying to get somewhere, be it a church, a bar, home or out of Lagos. Then there was the exodus of people to the |
1:56.8 | parts of the city that had the least chance of flooding if the water rose |
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