It's the word of the day for July 11th.
Today's word is rescind, spelled R-E-S-C-I-N-D.
Rescind is a verb.
To rescind something such as a law, contract, or agreement is to end it officially.
Rescind can also mean to take back or to cancel.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the LA Times.
A state environmental oversight board voted unanimously to rescind a controversial proposal that would have permitted California municipal landfills to accept contaminated soil that is currently required to be dumped at sites specifically designated and approved for hazardous waste.
The word rescind and the lesser known words ex-sind and pre-sind all come from the Latin verb skindere.
which means to split or cleave or separate.
Rescind was adapted from its Latin predecessor rescindere in the 16th century,
and prescind and exsind followed in the next century.
Exsind means to cut off or to excise, and prescind means to withdraw one's attention.
But of the three borrowings, only rescind established itself as a common English term.
Today, rescind is most often heard in contexts having to do with the withdrawal of an offer,
award, or privilege, or with invalidation of a law or policy.
With your word of the day, I'm Peter Sokolowski.