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🗓️ 16 March 2025
⏱️ 2 minutes
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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 16, 2025 is:
rife • \RYFE\ • adjective
Rife usually describes things that are very common and often—though not always—bad or unpleasant. Rife is also commonly used in the phrase “rife with” to mean “copiously supplied” or “having a large amount of; full of.” Unlike most adjectives, rife is not used before a noun.
// Speculation about who would be sent to the new office had been rife for weeks.
// The writer's history was rife with scandal.
Examples:
“At a time when TV viewers have infinitely more choices than they have ever had, networks and streaming platforms need to find ways to stand out and to make those viewers feel special. So their overriding goal is to make fans feel as if they’re being brought inside the shows they like. DVD features were once rife with this kind of thing, from behind-the-scenes footage to commentary tracks and blooper reels, all of which made their way straight to YouTube.” — Don Aucoin, The Boston Globe, 2 Jan. 2025
Did you know?
English is rife with words that have been handed down to us from Old English—among them, rife. It comes from the Old English adjective rȳfe and first appeared in written form in the 12th century. Its oldest meaning, still in use today, is synonymous with widespread and prevalent; it's more likely, however, than either of those to describe negative things, as in “corruption and greed were rife in City Hall.” Most often, rife is used alongside with to mean “abounding.” Although rife can be appropriately used for good or neutral things in this sense (and all senses), as in the first sentence of this paragraph, like its synonym and fellow Old English descendant lousy (from the Old English noun lūs, meaning “louse”), it tends to describe things one wishes weren’t in such copious supply.
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0:00.0 | It's the Word of the Day podcast for March 16th. |
0:11.4 | Today's word is rife, spelled RIFE. Rife is an adjective. It usually describes things |
0:17.8 | that are very common and often, though not always, bad or unpleasant. |
0:22.6 | Rife is also commonly used in the phrase rife with to mean copiously supplied or having a large amount of, full of. |
0:30.6 | Unlike most adjectives, rife is not used before a noun. |
0:34.6 | Here's the word used in a sentence from the Boston Globe. |
0:37.8 | At a time when TV viewers have infinitely more choices than they have ever had, |
0:42.8 | networks and streaming platforms need to find ways to stand out and make those viewers feel special. |
0:48.8 | So their overriding goal is to make fans feel as if they're being brought inside the shows they like. |
0:55.0 | DVD features were once rife with this kind of thing, |
0:58.5 | from behind-the-scenes footage to commentary tracks and blooper reels, |
1:02.0 | all of which made their way straight to YouTube. |
1:05.2 | English is rife with words that have been handed down to us from Old English, |
1:10.0 | among them the word rife. It comes from |
1:12.5 | the Old English adjective Rifa and first appeared in written form in the 12th century. Its oldest meaning |
1:18.4 | still in use today is synonymous with widespread and prevalent. It's more likely, however, |
1:23.9 | than either of those to describe negative things, as in corruption and greed were |
1:29.2 | rife in city hall. Most often, rife is used alongside the word with to mean abounding. Although |
1:36.6 | rife can be appropriately used for good or neutral things in this sense and all senses, as in the |
1:43.5 | first sentence of this paragraph, like its synonym |
1:46.3 | and fellow Old English descendant, lousy, from the Old English noun luce, meaning louse, |
1:53.4 | it tends to describe things one wishes weren't in such copious supply. With your word of the day, |
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