It's the Word of the Day podcast for October 5th.
Today's word is sonorous, spelled S-O-N-O-R-O-U-S.
Sonorous is an adjective.
It's used in formal speech and writing to describe something that has a deep,
loud and pleasant sound.
Sonorous can also mean producing sound when struck, and imposing or impressive in effect or style.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the Chicago Tribune.
The sonorous notes of a modern pipe organ were the soundtrack to my tour,
enhancing the sense of reverence the cathedral inspires.
If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, is it sonorous?
Don't be thrown off by the subtle tweak in this classic conundrum,
which usually ends with, does it make a sound?
It's still the same question.
Sonorous, in its oldest sense, simply describes things that make a sound when struck.
The words Latin ancestor sonorus is related to sonus, meaning sound.
By this definition, felled furs, wind-blown willows, etc., are all sonorous.
A desktop tapped by a pencil eraser wouldn't normally be described as sonorous, however.
The word is usually reserved for things that make a deep, loud, booming, or echoing sound.
Think timpanies, or toppling timber, not tables.
Sonorous is also frequently used to describe sounds themselves,