It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for June 19th.
Today's word is Jubilee, spelled J-U-B-I-L-E-E.
Jubilee is a noun.
Jubilee usually refers to a special anniversary or a celebration of such an anniversary.
It can also refer generally to a season of celebration or act of rejoicing or to a religious song of African Americans referring to a time of future happiness.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the Chicago Daily Herald.
The Juneteenth Freedom Day Festival will celebrate the date the remaining 250,000 enslaved people in Galveston,
Texas first heard news of the Emancipation Proclamation.
The commemoration of that event has spread from Texas and is now observed nationally as a day of jubilee and freedom.
Juneteenth, a holiday observed in the United States on June 19th,
in commemoration of the end of slavery,
has several other names as well, including Juneteenth National Independence Day,
Freedom Day, Black Independence Day, and Jubilee Day.
The word jubilee here is of special significance.
While Jubilee is often used generally to refer to an anniversary or celebration of an anniversary,
its history is intertwined with the idea of emancipation.
According to the biblical book of Leviticus, every 50 years, Hebrew slaves were to be set free,
lands given back to their former owners, and the fields left unharvested.
This year of liberty was announced when a ram's horn was blown.
In Hebrew, that ceremonial horn was called a yopel,