It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for August 25th.
Today's word is attenuate, spelled A-T-T-E-N-U-A-T-E.
Attenuate is a verb.
To attenuate something is to make it weaker or less in amount, effect, or force.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Returning Light 30 Years on the Island of Skellig Michael by Robert L. Harris.
The food sources at sea may well be sometimes subject to human greed,
but the puffin colony on the Skelligs is robust,
and this natural culling has always been a feature of their lives.
Yet here, our lives, the few of us who live here and those of the birds always overlap.
We too are utterly insignificant in the grand extent of all things,
and we share concerns with the wildlife here.
There are interconnections, there is co-dependence between us, even if it is attenuated,
at least in our human minds, and birds keep arriving at our doors.
The word attenuate ultimately comes from a combining of the Latin prefix ad,
meaning to or toward, and tenuis, meaning thin,
a pedigree that is in keeping with the English word's current meanings,
which all have to do with literal or metaphorical thinning.
The word is most common in technical contexts,
where it often implies the reduction or weakening of something by physical or chemical means.
You can attenuate wire by drawing it through successively smaller holes,