It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for September 17th.
Today's word is DALE, spelled D-A-L-L-Y.
DALE is a verb.
It has a number of meanings.
To DALE can be to physically linger or dawdle, or to waste time.
Dali may also mean to act playfully, especially in a romantic sense,
or to deal with something lightly or in a way that is not serious.
Here's the word used in a sentence from entrepreneur.
Just as businesses that dalied too long before moving into the era of computing lost ground and eventually faded away,
companies that delay in adopting the technologies of the future will find it impossible to keep up with those that take the necessary steps quickly.
English speakers have been futzing around with the word dali since the late Middle Ages.
They first started using it to mean to chat,
which was also the meaning of dalié, the Anglo-French word from which it came.
But this sense fell into disuse.
Next, they applied it to acting playfully with someone, especially in amorous and flirtatious ways.
The noun dalliance, meaning an act of daliing, is used to this day in this way.
The idea of more figurative flirtatiousness soon led to a sense of dally,
meaning to deal with lightly or in a way that is not serious.
Finally, by the mid-1500s,
perhaps because fuddy-duddies saw all of this fun and frivolty as a waste of time,