It's the Word of the Day podcast for March 13th.
Today's word is curfew, spelled C-U-R-F-E-W.
Curfew is a noun.
It refers to a law or order that requires people to be indoors after a certain time at night,
as well as to the period of time when such an order or law is in effect.
Chiefly in the United States,
curfew is also used to refer to the time set by a parent or caregiver at which a child has to be back home after going out.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Kingdom on Fire,
Kareem Wooden Walton and the Turbulent Days of the UCLA Basketball Dynasty by Scott Howard Cooper.
Lou Alcindor narrowed his college choice to Michigan, Columbia, St. John's in UCLA.
He liked Columbia as the chance to attend school walking distance to Harlem and a subway ride to the jazz clubs he had to leave early as a high schooler to make curfew.
Curfews set by parents and kept or broken by their offspring do not echo the origins of the word curfew in any discernible way.
If they did, they'd need to at least hint at the sound of a bell.
When curfew was first used in the 14th century,
it referred to the sounding of a bell at evening to alert people that they should cover their hearthfires for the night.
A necessary warning,
as many European houses in the Middle Ages were close enough to each other that fires could spread easily from one to the next.
The word came to English from Anglo-French, in which the signal was called couvre-feu.
a compound of couvrir, meaning to cover, and f, meaning fire.
Even when hearth fires were no longer regulated,