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🗓️ 25 June 2025
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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for June 25, 2025 is:
flotsam • \FLAHT-sum\ • noun
Flotsam refers to the floating pieces that remain after a shipwreck, or more broadly to any floating debris or wreckage. It is also used figuratively to refer to miscellaneous or unimportant material, often in the phrase "flotsam and jetsam."
// Driftwood and other flotsam washed onto the beach.
// Their apartment was adorned with the flotsam and jetsam of thrift stores and yard sales.
Examples:
"The Vancouver multidisciplinary artist and educator [Alex Tedlie-Stursberg] works in various mediums, using found objects and natural materials scavenged from the ocean’s edge and the landscape of the city. Detritus and flotsam become parts of beautiful sculptures, tableaus and assemblages in this artist's hands." — Dana Gee, The Vancouver (British Columbia) Sun, 23 Nov. 2024
Did you know?
English speakers started using flotsam, jetsam, and lagan as legal terms in the 16th and 17th centuries, with flotsam itself dating to the first years of the 17th. The three words were used to establish claims of ownership of the three types of seaborne, vessel-originated goods they named. Flotsam was anything from a shipwreck (the word comes from Anglo-French floter, meaning "to float"), and jetsam and lagan were items thrown overboard to reduce the cargo weight of a ship. Lagan was distinguished from jetsam by having a buoy attached so the goods could be found if they sank. In the 19th century, when flotsam and jetsam took on extended meanings, they developed synonymous applications and are today often paired, lagan having mostly been left at sea.
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0:00.0 | It's the Word of the Day podcast for June 25th. |
0:11.8 | Today's word is Flotsam, spelled F-L-O-T-S-A-M. |
0:17.4 | Flotsam is a noun. |
0:18.8 | It refers to the floating pieces that remain after a shipwreck, |
0:23.2 | or more broadly, to any floating debris or wreckage. It's also used figuratively to refer to |
0:29.7 | miscellaneous or unimportant material, often in the phrase flotsam and jetsam. Here's the word used |
0:36.7 | in a sentence from the Vancouver Sun. |
0:39.9 | The Vancouver multidisciplinary artist and educator works in various mediums |
0:45.7 | using found objects and natural materials scavenged from the ocean's edge and the landscape |
0:51.7 | of the city. |
0:53.1 | Detritus and Flotsam become parts of beautiful sculptures, |
0:56.8 | tabloes, and assemblages in this artist's hands. English speakers started using the words |
1:03.5 | flotsam, Jetsum, and Lagen as legal terms in the 16th and 17th centuries, with Flotsam itself dating to the first years of the 17th. |
1:13.6 | The three words were used to establish claims of ownership of the three types of seaborne vessel-originated goods they named. |
1:22.6 | Flotsam was anything from a shipwreck. The word comes from the Anglo-French word, floate, meaning to float, |
1:29.3 | and Jetsam and Lagen were items thrown overboard to reduce the cargo weight of a ship. |
1:35.3 | Lagen was distinguished from Jetsum by having a boy attached so the goods could be found if they sank. |
1:43.3 | In the 19th century, when Flotsam and Jetsam took on extended meanings, |
1:48.4 | they developed synonymous applications and are today often paired, |
1:52.9 | login having mostly been left at sea. |
1:55.7 | With your word of the day, I'm Peter Sokolowski. |
0:00.0 | Visit Miriamwebster.com. I'm Peter Sokolowski. |
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