It's the word of the day for March 26th.
Today's word is flippant, spelled F-L-I-P-P-A-N-T.
Flippant is an adjective.
Something described as flippant, such as behavior or a comment,
is lacking in proper respect or seriousness.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the Case Western Reserve, Observer by Kate Gordon.
While the show seems to take a flippant attitude to the neatly packaged solutions offered by wellness tourism,
I'm curious to see what it makes of these treatments underlying Buddhist and Hindu philosophies.
Consider the spatula, humble friend, to many a cook,
admire the pliancy with which it flips pancakes, eggs, your more widely cuts of meat.
We're not being flippant, that is, facetious or smart alecky.
Utensils are important,
and spatulas are particularly useful for understanding the origins of the word flippant.
Flippant is believed to come from the English verb flip,
which in turn is a supposed imitation of the sound of something, say a flapjack, flipping.
The earliest uses of the word flippant described flexible things like a spatula or nimble,
spry people capable of moving this way and that with ease.
Soon enough, flippant began to be used not only for people fluent in their movements,
but those whose words flow easily.
To be this kind of flippant was once a good thing.