It's The Word of the Day for March 6.
Today's word is career, spelled C-A-R-E-E-R.
Career is a verb.
To career is to go at top speed, especially in a headlong manner.
Here's the word used in a sentence from The Atlantic by Annie Lowry.
This winter I attended a livestock option on California's remote northern coast.
Ranchers sat on plywood bleachers, warming their hands as the auctioneer mumble chanted,
and handlers flushed cows into a viewing paddock one by one.
Most of the cows were hail animals, careering in and cantering out.
If you're already familiar with Careers' equestrian history, surely you joust.
The noun career dates to the early 16th century,
when it referred to the speed of something moving along a particular course.
To go in full career or at full career was to hurdle, barrel, blaze, or zip,
a meaning employed by Sir Walter Scott in a jousting scene in his historical romance, Ivanhoe,
with these words, the trumpets sounded and the knights charged each other in full career.
The verb career thus originally conveyed the action of a horse or rider,
making a short gallop or charge.
As when the very aptly named John Speed wrote in his 1611 History of Great Britain,
his horse of a fierce courage, careered as he went.
It later gained additional senses applied to the movement of horses,