It's the Word of the Day for April 16th.
Today's word is adversity, spelled A-D-V-E-R-S-I-T-Y.
Adversity is a noun.
It refers to a difficult situation or condition,
or to a state of serious or continued difficulty or misfortune.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Inside Higher Ed.
by Stephen Mintz.
To foster self-reliance,
colleges should focus on supports that empower students to face challenges instead of lowering demands to accommodate discomfort.
Institutions can create frameworks that help students cope,
adapt, and ultimately thrive in the face of adversity.
The world, alas, is full of adversity of all kinds, from misfortune to outright calamity.
But while we, being humble lexicographers, not sagacious philosophers,
cannot explain the source of such adversity, we can explain the source of the word adversity.
If you've ever faced adversity and felt like fate,
the world or something else was turned against you.
It will not surprise you that adversity traces back to the Latin verb advertere,
meaning to turn toward direct,
itself a combination of the verb verterre meaning to turn, and the prefix ad meaning to.
The past participle of adverterre is adversus, meaning turned toward, facing, opposed.