It's the Word of the Day podcast for October 22.
Today's word is betwixt, spelled B-E-T-W-I-X-T.
Betwixt is an adverb or preposition.
It's a synonym of the word between that lends an old-fashioned feel to both speech and writing.
It's sometimes used in the phrase betwixt and between to mean in the middle or neither one thing nor the other.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the LA Times.
Wolverine's players were skipping toward the locker room after the trophy presentation.
Roses betwixt their teeth, battle scars on their bodies.
Not many players in the recent history of college football have gone to the underworld and come back alive,
but there was no doubt they belonged here at last.
Betwixt and between have similar origins.
They both come from a combination of B-B-E, meaning make,
to cause to be or to treat as, and related Old English roots.
Both words appeared before the 12th century,
but use of betwixt dropped off considerably toward the end of the 1600s.
It never fully disappeared, however, surviving especially in the phrase betwixt and between,
meaning neither one thing nor the other.
Nathaniel Hawthorne employed betwixt no fewer than 13 times in the Scarlet Letter,
as when writing of fear betwixt the young,
guilt-stricken minister Arthur Dimsdale and Hester Prynne,