It's the word of the day for March 5th.
Today's word is a skew, spelled A-S-K-E-W.
A skew is an adjective.
It means not straight or at an angle.
and can also be used as both an adjective and an adverb.
Here's the word used in a sentence from The New Yorker by Chimimanda Ngozi Adichie.
I reread biography of Nigeria's foremost professor of statistics, Professor James Ngozi Adichie,
published in 2013,
three years before my father was made Professor Emeritus of the University of Nigeria.
The printing is uneven, the pages slightly askew,
but I feel a euphoric rush of gratitude to the authors.
Why does this line, the children and I adore him from my mother's tribute, soothe me so?
Why does it feel pacifying and prophetic?
It pleases me that it exists, forever declared in print.
If you watch enough nature documentaries, you may notice that gazelles are able to escape the claws,
and subsequently jaws, of cheetahs when they zigzag across the savannah,
rather than simply run in a straight line.
In Middle English, prey outmaneuvering a predator in this way might be said to be skewing.
Skew means both to take an oblique course, as it does in modern English,
as well as to escape, and comes from the Anglo-French word eschive, meaning to escape or avoid.