It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for May 27th.
Today's word is GLEAN, spelled G-L-E-A-N.
GLEAN is a verb.
To GLEAN is to gather or collect something bit by bit or in a gradual way.
GLEAN can also be used to mean to search something carefully and to find out.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Arendt Into the Maze,
The Life and Works of Martha Graham by Deborah Joett.
Not only did procuring money to maintain her company figure in Graham's acceptance of the occasional theater job during the 1930s,
perhaps too she thought that being associated with a successful play could bring new audiences to her dance performances.
There can be no doubt that she gleaned something from each experience outside the rigorous and profoundly idiosyncratic works she created for her company.
Even if she learned that there were some projects she would prefer never to undertake again.
While it's certainly true that one must reap what one sows,
that is, harvest the crops that one plants,
what should be done about the grain and other produce left over that the reapers missed?
Well, friends, that must be gleaned.
Waste not, want not, after all.
It's a finicky business, too, picking through stalks and underleaves and whatnot.
When it was first used in English in the 14th century,
the word glean carried both the sense of to gather grain or other produce left by reapers,
and the more figurative meaning of to gather information or material bit by bit,