It's the Word of the Day podcast for January 2nd.
Today's word is POPRI, spelled P-O-T-P-O-U-R-R-I.
Potpourri is a noun.
It's a mixture of dried flower petals, leaves,
and spices that is used to make a room smell pleasant.
When used figuratively, potpourri refers to a collection of various different things.
Here's the word used in a sentence from lithub.com.
The windows here are festooned with a potpourri of book jackets, portraits of Ataturk,
cheek-by-jowl with Turkey's great poet of opposition,
Hikmet, and stars of the populist Turkish cinema of Days Gone By.
Some people delight in the scent of potpourri and others find it cloying.
Happily,
this word manages to contain elements which will make each of these groups feel that their preferences are linguistically supported.
Potpourri is used today to refer literally to a fragrant mixture of flowers or herbs and figuratively to a miscellaneous collection or medley of things.
But potpourri first referred to a kind of stew of meat and vegetables,
usually including sausage and chickpeas.
It was borrowed from French where potpourri translates literally as putrid pot.
The French word was a translation of the Spanish ola podrida, which likewise means rotten pot.
We don't know why both the Spanish and French give their stews such unappetizing names,
although it has been suggested that the Spanish method of slowly cooking this dish over a fire may have had something to do with it.