It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for July 21st.
Today's word is visage, spelled V-I-S-A-G-E.
Visage is a noun.
It's a formal word that refers to someone's face or facial expression or to the general appearance of something.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Parade Magazine by Jessica Sager.
Carrie Russell was 22 when she was cast in the title role of Felicity.
At the beginning of the series, her character was 17 years old,
but thanks to Russell's preternaturally youthful visage and that glorious head of hair,
she pulled it off believably.
In Ozzy Mandious, Percy Bish Shelley's famous poem,
a traveler tells of a colossal statue's shattered visage,
lying half sunk in desert sands,
going on to describe its frown and wrinkled lip and sneer of cold command.
Now, Shelley could have simply chosen the word face over the more highfalutin synonym,
visage, but not only would face shatter the sonnet's iambic pentameter,
but a formal-sounding word is sometimes preferable to a basic one for all kinds of reasons,
including sound, tone, or simply the cut of its jib.
Physiognomy, for instance,
refers to facial features thought to reveal qualities of temperamental character,
as when Emily Bronte writes in Wuthering Heights,