It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for May 31st.
Today's word is foist, spelled F-O-I-S-T.
Foist is a verb.
Foist, which is almost always used with on or upon,
is used when someone forces another person to accept something,
usually something that is not good or not wanted.
Foist can also mean to pass off as genuine or worthy.
Here's the word used in A Sentence from the New York Times by Adele Waldman.
Since the passage of the Fair Labor Standards Act during the New Deal era,
Employers have had to pay most of their workers for 40 hours of work even when business was slow.
That was just the cost of doing business,
a risk capitalists bore in exchange for the upside potential of profit.
Now, however, employers foist that risk onto their lowest paid workers.
Part-time employees, not shareholders, have to pay the price when sales volumes fluctuate.
that the word foist is commonly used today to mean to force another to accept by stealth or deceit makes sense given its original now obsolete use in talking about a bit of literal sleight of hand.
When it first rolled into English in the mid-1500s, foist was all about dice, referring to palming,
that is concealing in one's hand a phony die so as to secretly introduce it into a game at a convenient time.
The action involved in this cheating tactic reflects the etymology of foist.
The word is believed to have come from the obsolete Dutch verb voisten,
meaning to take into one's hand.