It's the Word of the Day podcast for March 22nd.
Today's word is apotheosis, spelled A-P-O-T-H-E-O-S-I-S.
Apotheosis is a noun.
It refers to the perfect form or example of something, or to the highest or best part of something.
It can also mean elevation to divine status, deification.
It's usually singular, but the plural form is apotheoses, spelled with an E-S.
Here's the word used in a sentence from lithub.com.
At its simplest level, Canada appears in American literature as a wilderness escape from a more urbanized United States.
The apotheosis of this view of Canada
as a wilderness getaway might be Sylvia Plath's poem Two Campers in Cloud Country, subtitled Rock Lake, Canada,
and written about a camping trip she and her husband Ted Hughes took
through Canada and the northeastern U.S. in 1959.
Among the ancient Greeks, it was sometimes thought fitting to grant someone God status.
Hence the word apotheosis, from the verb apotheo or apotheoun, meaning to deify.
All are rooted in the Greek word theos, meaning God,
which we can also thank for such religion-related terms as theology and atheism.
There's not a lot of literal apotheosizing to be had in modern English,
but apotheosis is thriving in the 21st century.
It can refer to the highest or best part of something,
as in the celebration reaches its apotheosis in an elaborate feast,