It's the Word of the Day podcast for August 13th.
Today's word is calculus, spelled C-A-L-C-U-L-U-S.
Calculus is a noun.
It refers to an advanced branch of mathematics that deals mostly with rates of change and with finding lengths,
areas, and volumes.
The word can also be used, more broadly, for the act of calculating,
that is,
estimating something by using practical judgment or solving or probing the meaning of something.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the Chicago Sun-Times by Vinnie Duber.
official return to the active roster could change the calculus.
Solving calculus equations on a chalkboard allows one to erase mistakes and also hints at the words rocky and possibly chalky past.
Calculus entered English in the 17th century from Latin, in which it referred to a pebble,
often one used specifically for adding and subtracting on a counting board.
The word thus became associated with computation.
The phrase ponere calculus, literally to place pebbles, meant to carry out a computation.
The Latin calculus, in turn, is thought to perhaps come from the noun calx,
meaning lime or limestone, which is also the ancestor of the English word chalk.
Today, in addition to referring to an advanced branch of mathematics,
calculus can also be used generally for the act of solving or figuring something out.
and as a medical term for the tartar that forms on teeth, among other things.