It's the Word of the Day podcast for August 22nd.
Today's word is apathy, spelled A-P-A-T-H-Y.
Apathy is a noun.
It refers to a lack of feeling or emotion, or to a lack of interest or concern.
Here's the word used in a sentence from How to Be a Living Thing by Marie Andrew.
I find myself shrugging a lot more and answering, that seems true,
and saying the exact same thing to the opposing argument.
I've found myself concerned about my apparent apathy and disinterest in picking fights.
On the flip side, I'm an easier person to be around.
Once more without feeling, while its siblings antipathy,
sympathy, and empathy refer to often strong emotions,
whether tender or terrible, the word apathy is unconcerned with all that.
Whether one is feeling blasé, indifferent, or, to use a more recent coinage,
meh, apathy is the perfect word for such a lack of passion.
At the root of apathy and its kin is pathos, a Greek word meaning experience,
misfortune, or emotion, which led first to the adjective apathos, meaning not suffering,
without passion or feeling, or impassive, and then the noun apatheia,
before passing through Latin and Middle French on its way to English, and the English word pathos.
The prefix a in both means without.
The other aforementioned pathos descendants are, of course,