It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for September 2nd.
Today's word is incandescent spelled I-N-C-A-N-D.
E-S-C-E-N-T.
Incandescent is an adjective.
It has literal and figurative meanings.
Its literal meanings relate to heat and light.
It describes something that is white or glowing because of great heat,
and also something like a light bulb that produces bright light when heated.
In figurative use, incandescent relates to several kinds of brilliance.
Something or someone described as incandescent can be very impressive,
successful, or intelligent, or simply happy and lively.
In British English,
incandescent can also describe someone or something feeling or showing great anger.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Hunger, a foreword written by Alexander Chee.
Chang was 31 years old in 1998 when she debuted with Hunger.
The reviews were raves, the praise incandescent.
The New York Times profiled her two years after publication,
as if to observe just how extraordinary the collection and the reviews had been.
The critics said often that Chang was writing about lost homelands,
but you will see that these are stories mostly about the new homeland, not lost at all.