It's the Word of the Day podcast for September 7th.
Today's word is behest, spelled B-E-H-E-S-T.
Behest is a noun.
It can refer either to an authoritative order or an urgent prompting.
Here's the word used in a sentence from lithub.com.
Raymond Carver and I were selecting stories for our American short story masterpieces.
When Ray and I worked on our selections, we would meet in Manhattan,
where I lived, or in Syracuse, New York, where he lived.
Each morning we'd read and then meet for lunch and talk about what we'd read.
After lunch, we'd read some more, and at dinner we talked about the afternoon's reading.
Sometimes we'd reread at the other's behest.
In Return of the Jedi, the villain Darth Vader speaks with an old,
timey flair when he asks his boss,
the Emperor, for instructions with these words,
If the film's screenwriters wanted him to sound even more old-timey, however,
they could have chosen to have him ask, As a word for a command or order,
behest predates bidding in English by a couple centuries,
dating all the way back, long, long ago, though still in this galaxy, to the 1100s.
Its old English ancestor, the noun behase,
referred to a promise, a meaning that continued on in Middle English,