It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for May 29th.
Today's word is obstreparous.
Spelled O-B-S-T-R-E-P-E-R-O-U-S.
Obstreparous is an adjective.
It's a formal word that describes people or things that stubbornly resist control.
In this use, it's a synonym of the word unruly.
A person or thing described as obstreperous may also be defiantly or aggressively noisy.
Here's the word used in a sentence from The Atlantic by Isabelle Fatale.
In the 1887 essay Silent People as Misjudged by the Noisy,
an Atlantic contributor proposed an economical approach to talking.
As we get on in life past the period of obstreperous youth, we incline to talk less and write less,
especially on the topics which we have most at heart," the writer noted.
We are beginning to realize the uselessness of perpetually talking.
If there is a thing to be said,
we prefer to wait and say it only when and where it will hit something or somebody.
Imagine walking a dog down a sidewalk in a neighborhood full of delicious smells and other temptations.
It's easy to picture your pooch barking and straining at the leash to chase a squirrel or dragging you toward something enticingly to them stinky,
right?
But can you imagine saying to your doggo in response, quit being so obstreperous?
Probably not.