It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for June 20th.
Today's word is hue and cry, spelled as three words, H-U-E-A-N-D.
CRY.
Hue and Cry is a noun.
It refers to a clamor of alarm or protest in response to something.
It can also be used as a synonym of the word hubbub to refer to general noise or uproar.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the LA Times by Charles McNulty.
bedazzled by the lucrative allures of STEM and the popularity of business degrees,
universities have been defunding their humanities programs and transforming themselves into vocational training centers with five-star gyms.
The hue and cry over this benighted movement in which institutions of higher learning are turning their backs on their fundamental mission will likely not be enough to stop the forces operating under the cover of budgetary necessity.
Let's say it's the Middle Ages in England,
and a villainous highwomen has just made off with your purse of gold.
What do you do?
You can't call the police because in Medieval England there is no organized police force,
much less telephones.
It doesn't exist.
Instead, the job of fighting crime belongs to ordinary citizens.
The first step is to raise a stink.
Victims of or witnesses to a crime are expected to yell something like, stop thief,
so that anyone who hears the hue and cry will be legally bound to join in the pursuit of the perfidious pilferer.