It's the Word of the Day for January 6th.
Today's word is TOME, spelled T-O-M-E.
TOME is a noun.
It's a formal word for a book, and especially a very large, thick, often scholarly book.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Hype Beast magazine by Sarah Curran's.
The way that we've approached publishing at Climax is almost having these two very separate worlds that live perfectly together,
Isabella Burley says of her business's work in both the archival and contemporary worlds.
Climax returned with its second title earlier this month,
a 550-page tome surveying 10 years of images produced between 2014 and 2024 by artist Martin Sims,
whose work examines themes of identity, gender, and black culture.
When is a book not a book?
When it's a tome,
tome being a word that has always suggested something less or more than the word book.
When Tom was first used in English,
it referred to a book that was part of a larger multi-volume work,
which makes sense given that it comes from Tomos,
a Greek noun meaning section or role of papyrus,
that comes in turn from the verb Tem9, meaning to cut.
In ancient times, long scrolls of papyrus were often divided into sections.
When tome retains this meaning today,