It's the Word of the Day podcast for February 27th.
Today's word is DOF, spelled D-O-F-F.
DOF is a verb.
To DOF a hat or other piece of clothing is to take it off.
Here's the word used in a sentence from lithub.com by Rob Marland.
On the ferry from Oakland to San Francisco,
Oscar Wilde was introduced to a group of reporters who courteously doffed their hats.
Wilde failed to return the gesture,
much to the annoyance of one interviewer who used it as a pretext for blasting Wilde in his article.
Time was,
people talked about doffing and dawning articles of clothing with about the same frequency.
But in the mid-nineteenth century,
the verb don became significantly more popular and left dof to flounder a bit in linguistic semi-obscurity.
Dof and don have been a pair from the start, both date from the fourteenth century,
with dof arising as a middle English contraction of the phrase to do off,
and don as a contraction of to do on.
Shakespeare was among the first, as far as we know,
to use the word as it's defined in the more general sense of to rid oneself of or put aside.
He has Juliet give voice to this sense when she says, what's in a name?
That which we call arose by any other name would smell as sweet.