It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for August 8th.
Today's word is fusty, spelled F-U-S-T-Y.
Fusty is an adjective.
Someone or something described as fusty is rigidly old-fashioned.
Fusti is also used as a synonym of the word musti to describe things that are full of dust and unpleasant stale odors.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Vogue by Liam Hess.
One of the great joys of Paris is its wealth of niche museums,
and there's nowhere greater or more atmospheric in that regard than the Musée de la Chasse et de la Nature,
the Museum of Hunting and Nature.
The deliciously macabre displays of taxidermy are a highlight,
but the museum also manages to avoid feeling too fusty by bringing in contemporary artists to produce works in conversation with its collections,
from Sterling Ruby to Jeff Koons.
A long and whinish road led the word fusty to English's door.
While that road is a bit obscured,
evidence suggests that fusty comes from the Middle English noun foist,
meaning wine cask, which in turn traces back to the medieval Latin word fustis,
meaning tree trunk or wood.
Fusty itself originally described wine that had gone stale from sitting in the cask too long.
Fusty literally meant that the wine had the taste of the cask.
Eventually, fusty was used across the culinary universe for any stale food,