It's the Word of the Day podcast for May 2nd.
Today's word is ziggurat, spelled Z-I-G-G-U-R-A-T.
Ziggurat is a noun.
It's an ancient Mesopotamian temple consisting of a pyramidal structure built in successive stages with outside staircases and a shrine at the top.
The word ziggurat is also sometimes used for a similarly shaped structure.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Art in America by Alex Greenberger.
The Breuer Building, the former home of the Whitney Museum on New York's Upper East Side,
counts as one of the defining buildings of the brutalist movement.
Completed in 1966, it was designed by Marcel Breuer,
who envisioned the structure as an inverted ziggurat.
French professor of archaeology François Lenormand spent a great deal of time poring over ancient Assyrian texts.
In those cuneiform inscriptions, he pieced together the long-forgotten language,
now known as Akkadian, which proved valuable to our understanding of the ancient civilization.
Through his studies,
he became familiar with the Akkadian word for Mesopotamia's towering, stepped temples.
which stepped into English as the word ziggurat.
With your Word of the Day, I'm Peter Sokolowski.
Visit Merriam-Webster.com today for definitions, wordplay, and trending word lookups.