It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for September 5th.
Today's word is gridiron, spelled as one word, G-R-I-D-I-R-O-N.
Gridiron is a noun.
A gridiron is a football field.
The word gridiron is also sometimes used to refer to a great for broiling food,
as in put the stakes on the gridiron,
or something consisting of or covered with a network, as in a gridiron of streets and avenues.
Here's the word used in a sentence from ESPN.com by JJ Post.
After a decade-long wait for a new college football video game,
College Football 25 made its early accident Monday afternoon.
Once the clock struck 4 p.m.
Eastern, fans, athletes, coaches,
and athletic administrators all rushed to their consoles to get their first reps in on the virtual gridiron.
Are you ready for some football lingo?
Excellent, and if your big game preparations involve firing up a griddle at a tailgate party,
even better.
American football shares linguistic ties with that form of cookery.
One of the oldest senses of the word gridiron referred not to a football field,
but to a metal grate used for broiling food over an open fire.
In Middle English, such a grating was called a greadil,