It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for May 26th.
Today's word is symposium, spelled S-Y-M-P-O-S-I-U-M.
Symposium is a noun.
It can refer to either a formal meeting at which experts discuss a particular topic or to a collection of articles on a particular topic.
Symposium has two plural forms, symposia and symposiums.
Here's the word used in a sentence from The New Yorker by Manvir Singh.
In 1966,
at a meeting remembered in anthropological lore as the beginning of hunter-gatherer studies,
75 experts assembled in Chicago to synthesize our knowledge about foraging peoples.
More than 99% of human history was spent without agriculture, the organizers figured,
so it was worth documenting that way of life before it disappeared altogether.
The symposium, and an associated volume that appeared two years later,
both titled Man the Hunter, exemplified an obsession with hunting, meat-eating, and maleness.
When you hear the word symposium,
you may quite understandably envision conferences full of intellectuals giving heady presentations on various arcana.
But it was drinking more than thinking that drew people to the original symposia and gave us the word.
Symposium, symposia or symposiums in plural form, comes from the Greek noun symposium,
the word ancient Greeks used for a drinking party that follows a banquet.
Symposium, in turn, comes from sympenine, a verb that combines penine,
meaning to drink, with the prefix sin, S-Y-N, meaning together.