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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

recondite

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

Merriam-Webster

Arts, Education, Language Courses, Literature

4.51.3K Ratings

🗓️ 12 April 2026

⏱️ 2 minutes

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Summary

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for April 12, 2026 is:

recondite • \REK-un-dyte\  • adjective

Recondite is a formal word used to describe something that is difficult to understand or that is not known by many people.

// The text addresses a technical subject using recondite vocabulary, which makes it very difficult to read.

// The candy has the perfect balance of sweet and tart, but what delights me most are the recondite facts printed inside the wrapper.

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Examples:

“Each medical school has variations in its prerequisites, but all require a strong foundation in the sciences. This includes courses such as the notoriously recondite organic chemistry as well as biology, general chemistry, and physics.” — Richard Menger, Forbes, 18 Aug. 2025

Did you know?

Recondite is one of those underused but useful words that’s always a boon to one’s vocabulary. Though it describes something difficult to understand, there is nothing recondite about the word’s history. It dates to the early 1600s, when it was coined from the Latin word reconditus, the past participle of recondere, “to conceal.” (“Concealed” is also a meaning of recondite, albeit an obscure one today.) Remove the re- of recondite and you get something even more obscure: condite, an obsolete verb meaning both “to pickle or preserve” and “to embalm.” Add the prefix in- to that quirky charmer and we get incondite, which means “badly put together,” as in “incondite prose.” All three words have the Latin word condere at their root; that verb is translated variously as “to put or bring together” and “to put up or store”—as in, perhaps, some pickles or preserves.



Transcript

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0:00.0

It's Merriam Webster's Word of the Day for April 12th.

0:10.0

Today's word is recondite, also pronounced recondite, and spelled RECONDite.

0:16.0

And spelled RECOND-E.

0:20.0

Recondite is an adjective.

0:22.6

It's a formal word used to describe something that is difficult to understand or that is not known by many people.

0:30.6

Here's the word used in a sentence from Forbes.

0:33.6

Each medical school has variations on its prerequisites, but all require a strong foundation in the sciences.

0:41.3

This includes courses such as the notoriously Reckendite organic chemistry, as well as biology, general chemistry, and physics.

0:50.3

Recondite is one of those underused but useful words that's always a boon to one's vocabulary.

0:58.5

Though it describes something difficult to understand, there's nothing recondite about the

1:03.4

word's history. It dates to the early 1600s when it was coined from the Latin word reconditus,

1:10.7

the past participle of recondere, meaning to conceal.

1:14.5

Concealed is also a meaning of recondite, albeit an obscure one today.

1:20.5

Remove the prefix RE of recondite, and you get something even more obscure, condite,

1:27.0

an obsolete verb, meaning both to pickle or preserve

1:30.1

and to embalm. Add the prefix I-N to that quirky charmer, and we get incondit or incondite,

1:38.3

which means badly put together, as in incondit prose. All three words have the Latin word condare as their root. That verb is

1:47.5

translated variously as to put or bring together and to put up or store as in perhaps some

1:54.2

pickles or preserves. With your word of the day, I'm Peter Sokolowski.

2:02.4

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