The Word of the Day podcast for June 16th.
Today's word is gamut, spelled G-A-M-U-T.
Gamut is a noun.
A gamut is a range or series of related things.
When we say that something runs the gamut, we are saying that it encompasses an entire range of related things.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Coast Weekend.
With the song Do Re Mi, the 1965 musical film The Sound of Music,
adapted from the 1958 stage musical by Rodgers and Hammerstein, introduced millions of non-musicians to solfege,
the singing of the solfa symbols, Do Re Mi Fa Solati, to teach the tones of a musical scale.
Centuries earlier, however, the Do in Do Re Mi was known as Ut, spelled U-T.
Indeed, the first note of the scale of Guido Direzzo, an 11th century musician
and monk who had his own way of applying syllables to musical tones, was Ut.
Direzzo also called the first line of his bass staff Gamma,
which meant that Gamma Ut was the term for a note written on the first staff line.
In time, gamma-ut underwent a shortening to gamut,
and later its meaning expanded to cover all the notes of Direzzo's scale,
then to cover all the notes in the range of an instrument,
and eventually to cover an entire range of any sort.
With your word of the day, I'm Peter Sokolowski.
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