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🗓️ 29 August 2024
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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for August 29, 2024 is:
clement • \KLEM-unt\ • adjective
Clement is a formal word used to describe weather that is mild, or in other words, neither too hot nor too cold. Clement is also sometimes used to describe someone who is inclined to be merciful or lenient, as in “a clement judge.”
// Although she loves visiting the northeast, Sue prefers to live in places with a more clement climate, without heavy snows or high heating bills.
Examples:
“While the outdoor market is held rain or shine, Harriman and Donahue both said they’re hoping for clement weather not just for the first Saturday, but for as much of the season as possible. ‘Last summer it was so rainy,’ Donahue said. ‘It was incredibly wet. It doesn’t help growing things and it also doesn’t help with the tourist traffic.’” — Tim Cebula, The Portland (Maine) Press-Herald, 10 Apr. 2024
Did you know?
Weather reporting being what it is, one is more likely to encounter the word inclement (“stormy”) in a forecast than its opposite, clement, which makes sense: letting folks know it’s time to hunker down is more urgent than advising them to hop in a hammock. But both words, naturally, come from the same Latin adjective, clemens, meaning “mild” or “calm.” The weather-related senses of the pair arose in the mid-1600s, but clement was first used centuries earlier with a different meaning, still in use today, describing someone who is merciful or lenient. The word’s expansion into meteorological matters seems perhaps intuitive; after a week of rain or snow, the sun emerging from the clouds may seem like an act of mercy, indeed. (The use of inclement to describe someone cruel or unmerciful emerged in the early 1600s but has since become obsolete).
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0:00.0 | It's Merriam-Webster's word of the day for August 29th. |
0:11.3 | Today's Clement spelled CLEM E N T. |
0:16.0 | Clement is an adjective. |
0:18.0 | It's a formal word used to describe weather that is mild or in other words neither too hot nor too cold. |
0:25.0 | Clement is also sometimes used to describe someone who is inclined to be merciful |
0:30.0 | or lenient as in a Clement judge. Here's the word used in a sentence from the |
0:35.6 | Portland Press Herald. While the outdoor market is held rain or shine, |
0:40.9 | Harriman and Donahue both said they're hoping for clement weather, not just for the first Saturday, but for as much of the season as possible. |
0:49.0 | Last summer, it was so rainy, Donahue said. It was incredibly wet. It doesn't help growing |
0:55.1 | things, and it also doesn't help with the tourist traffic. |
0:59.3 | Weather reporting being what it is, one is more likely to encounter the word in Clement, meaning |
1:04.7 | stormy, in a forecast than its opposite Clement, which makes sense. |
1:09.8 | Letting folks know it's time to hunker down is more urgent than advising them to hop in a |
1:15.3 | hammock. But both words naturally come from the same Latin adjective, |
1:20.0 | Clemens, meaning mild or calm. |
1:23.0 | The weather-related senses of the pair arose in the mid-1600s, but Clement was first used centuries |
1:29.6 | earlier with a different meaning, still in use today describing someone who is merciful or lenient. |
1:35.9 | The words expansion into meteorological matters seems perhaps intuitive. |
1:41.2 | After a week of rain or snow, the sun emerging from the clouds may seem like an act of mercy, indeed. |
1:48.0 | The use of it Clement to describe someone cruel or unmerciful emerged in the early 1600s but has since become obsolete. |
1:56.0 | With your word of the day, I'm Peter Sokolowski. |
1:59.0 | Visit Marion Webster |
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