It's the word of the day for January 30th.
Today's word is audition, spelled A-U-D-I-T-I-O-N.
Audition is a noun,
and audition is a short performance to show the talents of someone such as an actor or a musician who's being considered for a role in a play or a position in an orchestra,
etc. Here's the word used in a sentence from Pitchfork by Zach Schoenfeld.
When she was 18, Hannah Damato auditioned for a spot at the Berkeley College of Music.
Midway through her audition,
one of the male judges walked up to her guitar amp and lowered the volume knob.
Demoralized and insulted,
D'Amato decided to bypass the prestigious institution and start a band on her own.
Thus the origin story of Fake Fruit,
the Bay Area punk trio she's been fronting over several incarnations since 2016.
Today the word audition most often refers to an artistic performance,
but that wasn't always the case.
Audition has roots in the Latin verb odire, meaning to hear,
and was first used in the late 16th century to refer to the power or sense of hearing.
Odire is also the root of such hearing-related words in English as audible,
meaning capable of being heard, audience,
which first meant the act or state of hearing,
and the combining form audio, which appears in various words relating to sound.