It's the Word of the Day for October 16th.
Today's word is EXACT.
Spelled EXACT is a verb.
To exact something, such as payment or revenge,
is to demand it and get it, especially by using force or threats.
Exact is also used in phrases like exact a terrible toll and exact a high or heavy price to say that something has caused a lot of suffering or loss.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Vulture by Noel Murray.
Milo did fake his death last season and has ever since been lurking in the shadows,
waiting to exact revenge on Iris and others.
To exact something is to not only demand it, but also obtain it.
The most common things exacted, revenge, retribution,
and that ilk often require physical force, but other things exacted,
such as penalties and prices, promises, and concessions,
can be obtained with gentler forms of persuasion.
The variation is present in the words Latin ancestor to.
Exigere means to drive out, to demand, and to measure.
Don't confuse the verb exact with the more common verb extract.
Extract is primarily about removing something and need not involve a demand.
A dentist extracts a tooth from, we hope, a willing patient.
and extracting juice from an orange carries no connotation of insistence.