It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for August 29th.
Today's word is Clement, spelled C-L-E-M-E-N-T.
Clement is an adjective.
It's a formal word used to describe whether that is mild,
or, in other words, neither too hot nor too cold.
Clement is also sometimes used to describe someone who is inclined to be merciful or lenient as in a Clement judge.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the Portland Press Herald.
While the outdoor market is held rain or shine,
Harriman and Donahue both said they're hoping for Clement weather,
not just for the first Saturday, but for as much of the season as possible.
Last summer, it was so rainy, Donahue said.
It was incredibly wet.
It doesn't help growing things, and it also doesn't help with the tourist traffic.
Weather reporting being what it is, one is more likely to encounter the word inclement,
meaning stormy, in a forecast than its opposite,
clement, which makes sense, letting folks know it's time to hunker down,
is more urgent than advising them to hop in a hammock.
But both words naturally come from the same Latin adjective, clemens, meaning mild or calm.
The weather-related senses of the pair arose in the mid-1600s,
but clement was first used centuries earlier with a different meaning,