It's the Word of the Day podcast for June 22nd.
Today's word is bemuse, spelled B-E-M-U-S-E.
Bemuse is a verb.
If you are bemused by something,
you are confused or bewildered by it and often also somewhat amused.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the Tampa Bay Times by Rick Stroud.
The duck touched down on the surface of Raymond James Stadium just minutes before the Bucks scored their own touchdown.
Many of the staff, not assigned to work on the field,
were bemused by the sight of anchor carrying a duck out of the stadium.
They held cell phones and took pictures.
In 1735,
British poet Alexander Pope lamented in rhyme being besieged by a parson much bemused in beer.
The cleric in question was apparently one of a horde of would-be poets who pestered Pope with requests that he read their verses.
Pope meant that the parson had found his muse, his inspiration, in beer.
That use of bemused harks back to a 1705 letter in which Pope wrote of poets irrecoverably bemused.
In both letter and poem,
Pope used the word bemused to allude to being inspired by or devoted to one of the muses,
the Greek sister goddesses of art, music, and literature.
The lexicographers who followed him, however,
interpreted bemused in beer as meaning left confused by beer.