It's the Word of the Day podcast for October 23rd.
Today's word is palaver, also pronounced palaver and spelled P-A-L-A-V-E-R.
Palaver is a noun.
It's an informal word that usually refers to unimportant or meaningless talk.
It can also refer to misleading or deceptive speech or to a conference or discussion.
In British English,
the word is sometimes used as a synonym of fuss to refer to unnecessary excitement about something.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Three Roads Back,
how Emerson Thoreau and William James responded to the greatest losses of their lives by Robert D. Richardson.
Henry Thoreau was working at his journal, as he usually did for a part of each day.
He was reading Chaucer and liking it.
A couple of days later, on Monday, January 3rd,
he made popcorn, which he playfully called Surileus Blossoms,
because they were only a more rapid blossoming of the seed under a greater than July heat.
On Wednesday, January 5th, as early clouds gave way to midday sun,
he praised manual labor as the best method to remove palaver from one's style.
Maybe he took his own advice about palaver.
We hear no more from him about ceruleus blossoms.
Let's talk about the word palaver.
Though it comes from Portuguese,