It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for October 14th.
Today's word is utopia, spelled U-T-O-P-I-A.
Utopia is a noun.
It refers to an imaginary place in which the government laws and social conditions are perfect.
A utopia is a place of ideal perfection.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Humans A Monstrous History by Sirika Davies.
Yet this position wasn't convincing either.
His utopia sounded more than a little dull, and nobody wants to be bored out of their minds.
There is quite literally no place like utopia.
In 1516, English humanist Sir Thomas Moore published a book titled Utopia,
which compared social and economic conditions in Europe with those of an ideal society on an imaginary island located off the coast of the Americas.
Moore wanted to imply that the perfect conditions on his fictional island could never really exist,
so he called it utopia,
a name he created by combining the Greek words u, meaning not, or no, and topos, meaning place.
The earliest generic use of the word utopia was for an imaginary and indefinitely remote place.
The current use of utopia, referring to an ideal place or society,
was inspired by Moore's description of utopia's perfection.
With your Word of the Day, I'm Peter Sokolowski.