It's the Word of the Day podcast for February 23rd.
Today's word is tausel, also pronounced tausel, and spelled T-O-U-S-L-E.
Tausel is a verb.
To tausel something is to dishevel it.
That is to make it untidy or unkempt.
Tausel is usually, though not always, used specifically when a person's hair is being so treated.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Parade by Megan Ruse.
One of her hands tauseled her long hair, which she wore down,
and the other hand hovered in front of her skirt as she hooked a thumb in its waistband.
She paired the fashion set with a choker necklace and dangling hoop earrings.
The verb tausel today is typically used for the action of musing someone's hair playfully,
tauseling the toddler's hair, or fussily, tauseling her tresses for that just woke-up look.
But the word's history is a bit edgier.
Tausel and its synonym, taus, T-O-U-S-E,
come from tausen, meaning to pull or handle roughly,
a frequentative of the Middle English verb, tauselen.
A frequentative indicates repeated or recurrent action.
Sniffle, for example, is a frequentative of sniff.
Both tousal and touse have older meanings having to do with rough handling in general.
Before hair was tousaled, people were.