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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

smite

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

Merriam-Webster

Arts, Literature, Language Courses, Education

4.31.2K Ratings

🗓️ 5 December 2023

⏱️ 2 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for December 5, 2023 is:

smite • \SMYTE\  • verb

Smite means “to hit someone or something very hard.” Other uses of the word include “to severely injure, kill, or attack someone” (as in “smitten by disease”) and “to captivate or take” (as in “smitten by her beauty”).

// He smote the ball mightily, which helped us win the game.

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Examples:

“Somehow, Kyle Shanahan keeps meeting his accursed fortune with a spirit of inquiry. His record is arguably the most perplexing in the NFL: He is one of its most playful minds and most pained losers. He seems at once young and old, with his boyishly thin neck and easy laugh yet gray bristle and a somewhat scarred look around his eyes, as if he’s waiting for the next hex or treacherous blow of fate to smite him in the face.” — Sally Jenkins, The Washington Post, 10 Dec. 2022

Did you know?

Today’s word has been part of the English language for a very long time; its earliest uses date to before the 12th century. Smite can be traced back to the Old English smītan, meaning “to smear (a substance) on something” or “to stain or defile.” Smite kept these meanings for a few centuries before they became obsolete and others arose or became more prominent, among them the modern “to strike or attack.” But smite also has a softer side. As of the mid-17th century, it can mean “to captivate or take”—a sense that is frequently used in the past participle in such contexts as “smitten by their beauty” or “smitten with them” (meaning “in love with them”). If such a shift seems surprising, just remember what they say about the moon hitting your eye like a big pizza pie (that’s a smiting).



Transcript

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0:00.0

It's Merion Webster's word of the day for December 5th.

0:11.0

Today's word is Smite, spelled SMITE.

0:16.0

Smite is a verb.

0:17.0

It means to hit someone or something very hard.

0:20.0

Other uses of the word include to severely injure, kill, or attack someone, as in smitten by disease,

0:27.0

and to captivate or take as in smitten by her beauty.

0:31.0

Here's the word used in a sentence from the Washington Post by

0:34.8

Sally Jenkins. Somehow Kyle Shanahan keeps meeting his accursed fortune with a

0:41.4

spirit of inquiry. His record is arguably the most perplexing in the

0:45.4

NFL. He is one of its most playful minds and most pained losers. He seems at once young and old with his boyishly thin neck and easy laugh, yet gray

0:57.5

bristle and a somewhat scarred look around his eyes, as if he's waiting for the next hex or treacherous blow of fate to smite him on the face.

1:07.0

Today's word has been part of the English language for a very long time.

1:11.0

Its earliest uses date to before the 12th century. Smite can be traced back to the old

1:17.7

English Smitan, meaning to smear a substance on something or to stain or defile.

1:25.0

Smite kept these meanings for a few centuries before they became obsolete and others arose or became

1:32.0

more prominent, among them the modern to strike or attack.

1:36.5

But Smite also has a softer side.

1:39.2

As of the mid-17th century, it can mean to captivate or take a sense that is frequently used in the past

1:45.2

participle in such contexts as smitten by their beauty or smitten with them

1:50.6

meaning in love with them if such a shift seems surprising, just remember what they say about

1:57.3

the moon hitting your eye like a big pizza pie. That's a smiting. With your word of the day. I'm Peter Sokolowski.

2:05.0

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