It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for April 21st.
Today's word is noblesse oblige spelled as two words
as they would be in French and O-B-L-E-S-S-E O-B-L-I-G-E.
Noblesse oblige refers to the idea that people who have high social rank or wealth should be helpful and generous to people of lower rank or to people who are poor.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the Eagle Times of Clermont, New Hampshire.
As is usually the case,
actual research reveals that the pair bond of the cardinal is not really sacrosanct.
The ostensibly quaint couples we see regularly have a 20% divorce rate.
which is of course better than our own, but they are not exactly swans.
And while they are mated, they are generally monogamous, but polygamy is known.
It is, however, usually observed in cases where the male of an adjacent territory goes missing,
or because an unmated female persists in foraging and remaining in a male's territory.
A strange form of noblesse oblige.
It has not been determined whether these second pairings produce any offspring.
In a tale collected in 16th century Germany,
a noble woman wonders why the hungry poor don't simply eat croissants, meaning a sweet bread.
Her cluelessness, prefiguring the later much more famous quote attributed to Marie Antoinette,
let them eat cake.
The queen never actually said that,
but we can think of the sentiment behind noblesse oblige as the quote's opposite,