It's the Word of the Day podcast for March 2nd.
Today's word is transpire spelled T-R-A-N-S-P-I-R-E.
transpire is a verb.
It's a formal word that means to happen, or in other words, to take place or occur.
It can also mean to come to light or to become known,
as in, it transpired that they had met previously.
In botany, to transpire is to give off or exude watery vapor,
especially from the surfaces of leaves.
Here's the word used in a sentence from a place called Yellowstone,
the epic history of the world's first national park.
Since that first super-eruption, there have been two more of comparable size,
roughly 1.3 million years ago and 630,000 years ago.
If this trend continues, with mega eruptions taking place every 600 to 700,000 years,
then Yellowstone is due for another major event.
But whether it happens tomorrow, in 50,000 years, or never transpires, no one can say.
If you're someone who gets in a sweat over the now-common use of the word transpire,
meaning to occur, we hope this explainer helps you cool down and breathe easier.
It just so happens that the word's expansion from its technical origins transpired in a logical or at least an understandable progression over the centuries.
Transpire comes from the Latin verb spirare, meaning to breathe,
which also breathed life into perspire, aspire, and inspire, among other words.