It's the Word of the Day podcast for June 15th.
Today's word is progeny, spelled P-R-O-G-E-N-Y.
Progeny is a noun.
It refers to the child or descendant of a particular parent or family.
Progeny can also refer to the offspring of an animal or plant or broadly to something that is the product of something else.
The plural of progeny is progeny.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Hope for the Wild in Afrofuturism by Christopher J. Schell.
I am, we are, our ancestors' wildest dreams.
The phrase originated from New Orleans visual artist,
activist, and filmmaker Brandon Odoms,
and was popularized by influential black figures like Ava DuVernay,
who used the phrase in tribute to the ancestors of First Lady Michelle Obama.
Melvinia Shields, who was born a slave in 1844,
would be survived by five generations of progeny,
ultimately leading to her great-great-great-granddaughter,
Michelle Obama.
The word progeny is the progeny of the Latin verb proginure,
meaning to beget.
That Latin word is itself an offspring of the prefix pro- meaning forth,
and gignure,