It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for September 12.
Today's word is Fraternize, spelled F-R-A-T-E-R-N-I-Z-E.
Fraternize is a verb.
To fraternize with someone is to be friendly with them,
or to spend time with them in a friendly way.
Fraternize is often, though not always,
used in situations where such friendly behavior is considered wrong or improper,
as in fraternizing with the enemy.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Variety by Stacy Morris.
Ten years after the successful opening of the Tyler Colleges,
my grandfather, who was 17 at the time,
began to study and take advantage of the rich social and economic legacy of barbering.
He opened the first barber shop to be owned and operated by an African-American in Gordon Heights,
Long Island.
From its humble beginnings to the next 68 years thereafter,
his business became a place in the black community that men gathered to connect,
fraternize, and, of course, get groomed, a place where black men found hope, streams, and pride.
Oh, brother, where art thou?
In many an English word descended from the Latin noun frater, meaning brother, that's where.
Both fraternize and fraternal, meaning of relating to or involving brothers,