gesundheit

健康!

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

2025-09-26

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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for September 26, 2025 is: gesundheit • guh-ZOONT-hyte  • interjection Gesundheit is an interjection used to wish good health to one who has just sneezed. // I sneezed three times in a row, and my coworker called "gesundheit!" from the next cubicle. See the entry > Examples: "Personally, I did not like my husband's sneezing into his hand, so I stopped saying 'gesundheit' whenever he did that. He now almost always sneezes into his elbow." — The Toronto Star, 27 Jan. 2024 Did you know? When English speakers hear "achoo," they usually respond with either "gesundheit" or "God bless you." Gesundheit was borrowed in the early 20th century from German, where it literally means "health"; it was formed from gesund ("healthy") and -heit ("-hood"). Wishing a person good health when they sneeze was historically believed to forestall the illness that a sneeze often portends. "God bless you" had a similar purpose, albeit with more divine weight to the well-wishing. Gesundheit at one time also served as a toast when drinking (much like its English counterpart, "to your health"), but this use is now largely obsolete.
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  • It's the word of the day for September 26th.

  • Today's word is gesundheit, spelled G-E-S-U-N-D-H-E-I-T.

  • Gesundheit is an interjection.

  • It's used to wish good health to one who has just sneezed.

  • Here's the word used in a sentence from the Toronto Star.

  • Personally, I did not like my husband's sneezing into his hand,

  • so I stopped saying Gesundheit whenever he did that.

  • He now almost always sneezes into his elbow.

  • When English speakers hear a Chu, they usually respond with either Gesundheit or God bless you.

  • Gesundheit was borrowed in the early 20th century from German, where it literally means health.

  • It was formed from Gesund, meaning healthy, and Height, meaning hood.

  • wishing a person good health,

  • when they sneeze was historically believed to forestall the illness that a sneeze often portends.

  • God bless you, had a similar purpose, albeit with more divine weight to the well-wishing.

  • Gesundheit at one time also served as a toast when drinking,

  • much like its English counterpart to your health, but this use is now largely obsolete.

  • With your Word of the Day, I'm Peter Sokolowski.