It's the word of the day for March 27th.
Today's word is archetype, spelled A-R-C-H-E-T-Y-P-E.
Archetype is a noun.
It refers to someone or something that is seen to be a perfect example.
It's also a word for the original pattern or model of which all things of the same type.
are representations or copies.
Here's the word used in a sentence from lithub.com by Gina Chung.
One of the most notable features of folktales, fairy tales, myths, and legends are their simplicity.
These stories, many of them passed down to us across generations,
are compelling because of the recognizable archetypes they incorporate, the evil stepmother,
the dutiful daughter, the greedy king, etc. their straightforward moral arcs,
and their use of magic and transformation as catalysts for the plot.
In her 2024 book, Doppelganger, A Trip Into the Mirror World, author Naomi Klein writes that,
Klein doesn't mean that the same double,
evil twin, or changeling keeps popping up throughout history,
of course,
but that the original concept of a doppelganger has served as a pattern model or template for writers to use in different ways,
each supplying it with their own imagined details.
Archetype's origins are in two Greek words, the verb arcine,
meaning to begin, and the noun tipos, meaning type.