It's the Word of the Day podcast for January 3rd.
Today's word is adelpated, spelled A-D-D-L-E-P-A-T-E-D.
Adelpated is an adjective.
Someone described as adelpated is mixed up or confused.
Adelpated can also be used as a synonym of the word eccentric.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the Washington Post.
Overwhelmed and a little at sea, so to speak,
this viewer combed these scenes for cinematic clues to whatever the narrative takeaway would be.
The cinematic stuff was misdirection,
and the mission ends with an atlapated navigator getting promoted because of his mistakes.
In this hectic, often confusing world of ours,
it's probably safe to say that Even the sharpest thinkers,
the wonks and eggheads among us, get a little adelpated from time to time.
In fact, the idea of an adelpated egghead makes some etymological sense.
Adelpated combines the words adel and pate.
While the meaning of the somewhat rare noun pate, meaning head,
is straightforward, cracking open the adjective adel is where things get interesting.
In Old English, the noun adela referred to filth or a filthy or foul-smelling place.
In Middle English, adela came to be used as an adjective in the term adel-eye, meaning putrid egg.
For its first few centuries of adjectival use and with various spellings,