It's the Word of the Day podcast for July 16th.
Today's word is abject, spelled A-B-J-E-C-T.
Abject is an adjective.
It usually describes things that are extremely bad or severe.
It can also describe something that feels or shows shame or someone lacking courage or strength.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the LA Times.
This moment points toward the book's core.
A question of how to distinguish tenderness from frugality.
Is homework about a child who took a remarkably frictionless path aided by a nation that had invested in civic institutions from monetary hardship to the ivory tower?
Merely technically.
Is it a story of how members of a family protected by a social safety net from abject desperation developed different ideas about how to relate to material circumstance?
We're getting there.
We're sorry to say you must cast your eyes down to fully understand the word abject.
In Middle English, it described those lowly ones who are rejected and cast out.
By the 15th century, it was applied, as it still is today,
to anything that has sunk to or exists in a low state or condition.
In modern use, it often comes before the words poverty, misery, and failure.
Applied to words like surrender and apology, it connotes hopelessness and humility.
The words Latin source is the verb abicere, meaning to throw away, throw down, overcome, or abandon.
Like reject, its ultimate root is the Latin verb, jeccere, meaning to throw.