It's the word of the day for July 27th.
Today's word is brouhaha, spelled B-R-O-U-H-A-H-A.
Brouhaha is a noun.
It's a synonym of both the words uproar and hubbub that refers to great excitement or concern about something.
Here's the word used in a sentence from The New Yorker by Alex Ross.
Ultimately, like much of the population, Mountain Lion P22 seemed to be making do with what he had.
His crawlspace sit-in, which dominated the local news media for a couple of days,
felt like a moment of accommodation.
In the face of feeble attempts to get him to move, lights were flashed, sticks were waved,
a tennis ball cannon was deployed,
P22 stared out with an imperturbable expression that members of cat households recognized instantly.
It said, what?
At night, once the brouhaha had died down, P22 slipped back into the park.
The English language borrowed the word brouhaha directly from French in the late 19th century,
but its origins beyond that are uncertain.
Not the subject of a noisy brouhaha, but perhaps a little modest debate.
What's less arguable is that brouhaha is fun to say,
as are many of its synonyms, including hubbub, willawa, hullabaloo, bobbery, and kerfuffle.
Many of these like brouhaha tend to suggest a certain judgment that the reason for all the foufoura is a bit silly or at least not worth getting all worked up about.
A dad joke, for example,