It's the Word of the Day podcast for September 8th.
Today's word is Sanguine, spelled S-A-N-G-U-I-N-E.
Sanguine is an adjective.
It's a formal word that today almost always describes someone who is confident and hopeful,
or something that shows confidence and hopefulness.
Sanguine can also describe something that is blood-red in color,
something involving or relating to bloodshed, or a person's reddish complexion.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Time.
David Corinswet is remarkably sanguine about a film that has been the subject of immense scrutiny.
The trailer is the most watched in the history of either DC or Warner Bros.
though he may not want the burden of Superman's success or failure on his,
yes, broad shoulders, it will land there anyway.
If you're the sort of cheery,
confident soul who always looks on the bright side no matter what happens,
you may be described as Sanguine.
Sanguine traces back to the Latin noun Sanguis, meaning blood.
And over the centuries, the word has had meanings ranging from bloodthirsty to blood red,
among other things, in that ahem, vein.
So how did it also come to mean hopeful?
During the Middle Ages,