It's the Word of the Day podcast for October 7th.
Today's word is Lez Majesty, also pronounced Lez Majesty,
and spelled as two words as they would be in French.
L-E-S-E-M-A-J-E-S-T-E.
There's a grave accent rising to the left on the first E of Lez.
or lace, and there's an acute accent rising to the right on the last letter of majesty.
Lace Majesty can refer to a true crime or offense or to something likened to a crime or offense.
Most often it's the latter,
with Lace Majesty referring seriously or playfully to an act of disrespect that diminishes the dignity or importance of someone or something.
In the former use, Lays Majesty refers to a crime,
such as treason, that is committed against a sovereign power,
or to an offense that violates the dignity of a ruler as the representative of a sovereign power.
Here's the word used in a sentence from The Guardian.
The graphic novelist Posi Simmons has won the Grand Prix at France's Angoulême International Comics Festival.
The first time a British artist and author has been awarded the world's most prestigious prize for lifetime achievement in comics.
I wanted to take the story of Madame Bovary but update it and it would be my story, she said.
When it was published in French, I was rather frightened.
I was worried it would be seen as Lays' Majesty that I had appropriated this great French classic.
But they really liked the book, which was wonderful.
Lays' Majesty came into English by way of Middle French from the Latin phrase Laysa Majestas,