It's the Word of the Day podcast for December 25.
Today's word is Evergreen, spelled as one word, E-V-E-R.
G-R-E-E-N.
Evergreen is an adjective.
In its figurative uses,
it describes something such as a plot that retains its freshness or interest over a long period of time,
or something such as an issue or concern that is universally and continually relevant.
In botany,
Evergreen describes foliage that remains green and functional through more than one growing season.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the New Yorker quoting Jesse Eisenberg.
Otenenbaum, Otenenbaum.
As you are one of the most universally recognized symbols for both the secular and religious observances of Christmas,
decorating your lovely branches is an evergreen tradition in two ways.
First, because you are almost always an evergreen tree, that is a conifer,
such as a fir spruce or pine whose foliage remains green through more than one growing season.
Second, because bringing an evergreen into one's home in late December is an evergreen tradition,
one that has occurred perennially or yearly since at least the 16th century,
when people in what is now Germany used evergreens to celebrate December 24th,
the feast day of Adam and Eve.
The adjective evergreen is older than its noun.