It's the word of the day for November 13th.
Today's word is bevy, spelled B-E-V-Y.
Bevy is a noun.
A bevy is a large group of people or things.
Bevy is usually used in the singular form and accompanied by the word of.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the Chicago Sun-Times by Erika Thompson.
Among several moving murals currently displayed on select CTA trains is the picture of a young girl standing among daffodils,
meant as a symbol of hope.
Another train features a hand painting, the phrase New ideas amid a bevy of flowers.
A third includes the phrase, help us bridge the gap,
while showing the juxtaposition of the city's pristine downtown and the disrepair of certain neighborhoods.
There's no reason to quail when confronted with a word of uncertain origins.
Some mysteries are simply destined to remain as such.
Etymologists have a bevy of theories about the roots of the word bevy,
for example, but little definitive evidence.
And that's okay.
What we do know is that bevy emerged out of Middle English as the collective noun for a number of birds and mammals that were commonly hunted,
including pheasants, partridges, roe deer, larks, and especially quail.
Bevy is still used in this way today, not only for wild game, but for gulls, hands,
etc. But bevy's are now most often composed of a great many people and things,