It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for June 16th.
Today's word is paradigm, spelled P-A-R-A-D-I-G-M.
Paradigm is a noun.
It's a formal word that refers to a pattern or example,
and especially to an outstandingly clear or typical example or archetype.
It can also refer to a theory or group of ideas about how something should be done,
made, or thought about.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Billboard by Tom Rowland.
In a music paradigm that's increasingly focused on individual tracks,
artists still have a chance to make a bigger statement about the world and themselves through larger collections that can explore a variety of styles and emotions.
The word paradigm comes from the Greek verb meaning to show side by side.
It's been used in English to mean example or pattern since the 15th century.
There's a debate, however, about what kind of example qualifies as a paradigm.
Some people say it's a typical example,
while others insist it must be an outstanding or perfect example.
The scientific community has added to the confusion by using paradigm to mean a theoretical framework,
a sense popularized by American scientist Thomas S. Kuhn in the second edition of his influential book The Structure of Scientific Revolutions,
published in 1970.
Some usage commentators now advise avoiding the term entirely on the grounds that it is overused.
But we contend that it can sometimes make a useful conversation-enriching replacement for words like idea,