It's the Word of the Day podcast for October 2nd.
Today's word is FRET, spelled F-R-E-T.
FRET is a verb.
To fret is to worry or be concerned.
Here's the word used in a sentence from The Washington Post.
Many communal laundry spaces have rules posted,
but over time they can get lost, forgotten, or ignored.
If you find yourself in uncertain waters about how to be a good neighbor, don't fret.
We asked laundry and etiquette experts for their best tips on how to handle some of the most common faux pas.
Fret not about being unfamiliar with the history of the verb fret.
We've got something for you to chew on.
While fretting today usually involves a concern that is figuratively eating at someone,
fret has older senses that apply to literal eating.
Fret comes from the old English verb Fretan, meaning to devour,
which shares an ancestor with another verb, Eitan, the ancestor of the word eat.
In centuries past, animals or monsters, in the case of Grendel,
were said to Fret as were substances that corrode or eat away at other substances.
But it wasn't long before fret was also applied to emotional experiences,
as when someone frets over an all-consuming thought or trouble.
While fret still carries the meanings of to corrode, to fray, and to chafe,