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🗓️ 1 April 2024
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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for April 1, 2024 is:
shambles • \SHAM-bulz\ • noun
Shambles refers to a place or state in which there is great confusion, disorder, or destruction.
// The house party they had over the weekend left the entire living room in shambles.
Examples:
"In this film, three friends … reconnect and find themselves attempting to relive the glory days after suffering several defeats that life has thrown their way. After heading to a once-beloved ski resort, they find it in shambles." — Christopher Hinton, Digital Trends, 24 Feb. 2024
Did you know?
The story of shambles appears to be a bit of a shambles: somehow, a word meaning "footstool" gave us a word meaning "mess." It all starts with the Latin word scamillum, the diminutive of scamnum, meaning "stool, bench." Modify the spelling and you get the Old English word sceamol, meaning "stool." Alter again to the Middle English word shameles (the plural of schamel), and give it a more specific meaning: "a vendor’s table." Tweak that a little and you arrive at the 15th-century term shambles, meaning "meat market." A century or so takes shambles from "meat market" to "slaughterhouse," then to figurative application as a term referring to a place of terrible slaughter or bloodshed (say, a battlefield). The grim connotations fade over time, but the messiness remains, and voilà: the modern sense of shambles meaning "mess" or "state of great confusion." Transition accomplished!
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0:00.0 | It's Merriam-Webster's word of the day for April 1st. |
0:11.0 | Today's word is shambles, spelled S-H-A-M-B-L-E-S-Shambles is a noun. It refers to a place or state in which |
0:20.2 | there is great confusion disorder or destruction. |
0:23.2 | Here's the word used in a sentence from digital trends by Christopher Hinton. |
0:28.4 | In this film, Three Friends reconnect and find themselves attempting to relive the glory days after suffering several defeats |
0:36.0 | that life has thrown their way. |
0:38.3 | After heading to a once beloved ski resort, they find it in shambles. |
0:43.7 | The story of the word shambles appears to be a bit of a shambles. |
0:47.7 | Somehow a word meaning footstool gave us a word meaning mess. |
0:52.0 | It all starts with the Latin word scamilum, the diminutive of scam num, meaning |
0:57.3 | stool or bench. Modify the spelling and you get the old English word Schemal meaning stool, alter again |
1:05.0 | to the middle English word |
1:07.0 | Shamales, the plural of Shamel, |
1:09.0 | and give it a more specific meaning of a vendors table. |
1:14.5 | Tweak that a little bit and you arrive at the 15th century term |
1:17.7 | shambles, meaning meat market. |
1:20.5 | A century or so later, shambles moves from Meat Market to Slaughter House and then to a |
1:26.3 | figurative application as a term referring to a place of terrible slaughter or |
1:30.8 | bloodshed, say a battlefield. The grim connotations fade over time, but the messiness |
1:36.4 | remains, and voila, the modern sense of shambles meaning mess or state of great confusion, |
1:42.4 | transition accomplished with your word of the day. meaning mess or state of great confusion, |
1:42.5 | transition accomplished. |
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