It's the Word of the Day for October 18th.
Today's word is zest, spelled Z-E-S-T.
Zest is a noun.
It refers to an enjoyably exciting quality or to keen enjoyment itself.
In culinary use, zest refers to small pieces of the peel of a lemon,
lime, or orange or other citrus fruit used as flavoring.
Here's the word used in a sentence from 12 Trees, The Deep Roots of Our Future by Daniel Lewis.
In 1773, J.A.E.
Groes, a German pastor with a zest for microscopy, first identified the tardigrade.
Because tardigrades are micro-sacks of goo, albeit with mouths,
rectums, and esophagi, they don't fossilize.
But three of their intact remains from deep time have been found,
all in amber spread out over nearly 60 years of painstaking research between 1964 and 2022.
When life hands you lemons, the saying goes, make lemonade.
The message of this zingy aphorism is to take situations that are metaphorically sour and make them sweeter.
You could do this by squeezing entire lemons to restore some excitement and enjoyment to your life,
but you could also just take a little of the zest.
Zest, of course, refers to tiny pieces of citrus, rind,
that are used to brighten or enhance the flavor of food and beverages.
English speakers adopted the French word zest in the late 1600s with this meaning,