It's the Word of the Day podcast for December 29th.
Today's word is lynchpin, spelled as one word, L-I-N-C-H-P-I-N.
Lynchpin is a noun.
It's sometimes spelled with a Y, L-Y-N-C-H-P-I-N,
and it literally refers to a locking pin inserted crosswise, as at the end of an axle or shaft.
In figurative use,
lynchpin refers to a person or thing that serves to hold together parts or elements that exist or function as a unit.
Such a lynchpin is often understood as the most important part of a complex situation or system.
Here's the word used in a sentence from My Black Country,
a journey through country music's black past, present, and future by Alice Randall.
When people tell the story of my life,
when I tell this story of my life, Trisha doesn't get much space.
But she is a linchpin.
For me,
the linchpin is that tiny bit of aid that holds things together when they might otherwise fall apart,
that keeps you rolling down the road to where you were already going.
It's not the engine, it's not the track.
It's invisible, but in the moment, essential help.
In his 1857 novel, Tom Brown's School Days,
Thomas Hughes describes the cowardly custom of taking the lynchpins out of the farmers and bag men's gigs at the fairs.