It's the word of the day for July 14th.
Today's word is nuance, spelled N-U-A-N-C-E.
Nuance is a noun.
A nuance is a very small difference in something, such as color, tone, or meaning.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the Minnesota Star Tribune.
Whether it's historians, journalists, anthropologists, or poets,
those outside our community have attempted to narrate our experiences.
But no matter how well-intentioned, they cannot fully capture the depth and truth of our story.
Why?
Because we can only speak with the authority of lived memory,
cultural nuance, and ancestral knowing.
The history of the word nuance starts in Latin, with the noun nubase, meaning cloud.
Nubase floated into Middle French as nous, also meaning cloud,
which eventually gave rise to nue, meaning to make shades of color.
The association of a word for cloud with gradation of color apparently comes from the perception that an object's color is weakened when mist passes over it.
Nue, in turn, produced nuance, which in Middle French meant shade of color.
English borrowed nuance from French with the meaning a subtle distinction or variation in the late 18th century.
That meaning persists today, but the word has also picked up a few nuances of its own.
For example, nuance is sometimes used in a specific musical sense,
designating a subtle expressive variation in a musical performance such as in tempo,