It's the word of the day for January 9th.
Today's word is excursion, spelled E-X-C-U-R-S-I-O-N.
Excursion is a noun.
It refers to a trip and especially to a short one made for pleasure.
Excursion is also often used figuratively to refer to a deviation from a direct definite or proper course,
and often in particular to a digression.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Three Shades of Blue, Miles Davis,
John Coltrane, Bill Evans, and The Lost Empire of Cool by James Kaplan.
In the late 60s, Miles Davis abandoned acoustic jazz altogether,
moving to the easy uneasy blend of jazz and rock that would cause consternation among jazz purists and come to be known as fusion.
Then, in 1975, plagued by profuse health problems and addictions,
he left music altogether not to return until 1981.
Audiences and record buyers welcomed his comeback,
though Jazz's zealous gatekeepers continued to fret about his stylistic excursions and commercial aspirations.
A tribe called Quest's 1991 album, The Low End Theory,
is not only widely regarded as one of the greatest hip-hop albums of all time,
but one of the genre's most successful early excursions into jazz,
utilizing samples and even featuring legendary bassist Ron Carter on one song.
The word excursion refers to a usually brief pleasurable trip and is often used figuratively as in the previous sentence,
for metaphorical trips outside of one's usual territory, be they artistic or otherwise.