It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for June 13th.
Today's word is lodestone, spelled L-O-D-E-S-T-O-N-E.
Lodestone is a noun.
When used literally, lodestone refers to the mineral magnetite, a magnetic iron ore.
Loadstone is also used figuratively to refer to something that,
like a magnet, strongly attracts things.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Vulture by Craig Jenkins.
Britney Spears' quest to please a growing constituency was a savvy balancing act.
She understood what was expected of a team star at the time,
family-friendly entertainment that didn't rock anyone's boat.
Spears handled this feat impressively well in those years.
She became a vessel for our intense emotions,
but in the process she would also become a lodestone for criticism of an entire generation's tastes and habits.
The word lodestone is sometimes confused, understandably, with the similar-sounding load star.
Both combine load, L-O-D-E, which comes from the Old English noun load,
meaning course, with another word with ancient Old English roots, stone, and star.
Respectively, both loadstone and loadstar also refer to things,
both literal and figurative, with the power to inspire or compel movement.
But while a loadstar is something that leads the way, for example,
a moral principle that guides a person through life, a loadstone draws things toward itself.