It's the Word of the Day podcast for November 30th.
Today's word is frugal, spelled F-R-U-G-A-L.
Frugal is an adjective.
Someone described as frugal is careful about spending money or using things unnecessarily.
Frugal can also describe something that is simple and plain in a way that reflects such carefulness with money and resources.
Here's the word used in a sentence from People by Clarissa Cruz.
I would take anything that I had and put it in a pan and just fry it up and then eat it with a fork out of the pan
because it would also cut down on the minimum amount of dishes for me to have to clean.
Kevin Bacon recalls of some of his early egg onion leftover pasta concoctions.
And though his frugal days are behind him,
the star still prefers cooking over fancy restaurant meals most of the time.
Folks who are frugal tend to frown on the frivolous, frittering away of the fruits of their labor,
so it may surprise you to learn that the word frugal comes from the Latin word frux,
which means, among other things, fruit.
Perhaps because of fruit's financial value, from frux followed frughi,
an adjective meaning deserving sober or thrifty,
which finagled its way into late Latin in the form frugalis.
meaning not given to excess, temperate, sober, simple.
Then Middle French and finally English as the familiar word frugal.
Today,