It's the Word of the Day podcast for August 31st.
Today's word is simpatico, spelled S-I-M-P-A-T-I-C-O.
Simpatico is an adjective.
interests, etc. It can also describe someone who is agreeable or likable.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the New York Times.
From the early 2010s, when he was a young teen rapper in Chicago,
Chief Keef was flooding his Instagram with self-documentation, all of which is essentially gone now.
Enter Edward Tabernaire Perez,
an amateur archivist and professional graphic designer who compiled Sosa Archive,
a limited-run art book that gathers several thousand photos pulled from Keefe's Instagram,
presenting them in visually simpatico grids of 12.
The word simpatico, which comes ultimately from the Latin noun sympatia, meaning sympathy,
was borrowed into English from both the Italian simpatico and the Spanish simpatico.
In those languages,
the word has been chiefly used to describe people who are well-liked or easy to get along with.
Early uses of the word in English reflected those of their forebears,
as in Henry James's 1881 novel The Portrait of a Lady,
in which one character says of another's dying cousin, Ah,
he was so simpatico, I'm awfully sorry for you.
In recent years, however,