It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for July 28th.
Today's word is dulcet spelled D-U-L-C-E-T.
Dulcet is an adjective.
It's a formal word used to describe sounds that are pleasant to the ear.
It's often used in the phrase dulcet tones.
Here's the word used in a sentence from and the category is Inside New York's Vogue House and Ballroom Community by Ricky Tucker.
It's an understatement to say that Paris' burning was everything to me.
Seeing it finally put a name on what I had somehow known existed,
perhaps, through family conversations,
run-ins in the city, and pop-cultural dots connected over a couple of decades of life, Ballroom.
I was finally able to say, there it is.
My takeaways from that cult classic are numerous.
The dulcet tones of pepper labesia draped in silk in a lamplit corner, chain smoking,
and unraveling the yarn of how she became the next mother of the very first house in ballroom,
the house of labesia.
Some of the most dulcet tones in American folk music are said to come from the dulcimer,
a fretted stringed instrument traditionally played on the lap,
and integral to the work of such sweet-voiced musicians and song collectors as Gene Richie,
Lorraine Wyman, and Margaret MacArthur.
The essence of the word dulcet, after all, is sweetness.