It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for June 14th.
Today's word is rebuff, spelled R-E-B-U-F-F.
Rebuff is a verb.
To rebuff something such as an offer or suggestion is to reject or criticize it sharply.
One can also rebuff a person by rudely rejecting or refusing them.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the Dallas Morning News.
The state rebuffed the lawyer's efforts to use the fees as seed money for a new technology system.
Many English verbs begin with the prefix RE, meaning again, or backward.
So we wouldn't criticize you for drawing a connection between the words rebuff and buff,
a verb meaning to polish or shine.
But rebuff would beg to differ.
This word comes to us from the middle French verb rebuffet,
which traces back to the old Italian rebuffare, meaning to reprimand.
Buff, in contrast, comes from the middle French noun buffle, meaning wild ox.
A similar word, rebuque, shares the criticized sense of rebuff, but not the reject sense.
One can rebuque another's actions or policies,
but one does not rebuque the advances of another, for example.
Like rebuke, rebuff can also be used as a noun,
as in the proposal was met with a stern rebuff from the Board of Trustees.
With your Word of the Day, I'm Peter Sokolowski.