It's the word of the day for October 23rd.
Today's word is litany, spelled L-I-T-A-N-Y.
Litany is a noun.
It usually refers to a long list of complaints or problems.
It can also refer to a sizable series or set, a lengthy recitation,
a repetitive chant, or a particular kind of call and response prayer.
Here's the word used from What Kept You by Raza Jamshed.
Out spilled the litany of all the names of all the things you thought I still feared.
a big bad wolf, a two-headed snake, a balden hyena,
a beast dropped from the sky, an earthquake, a devil with red bells around its neck.
Your words were steady, steeped in the old stories, but my eyes flicked to the window, unafraid.
I was too old for easy monsters.
How do we love the word litany?
Let us count the ways.
We love its original 13th century meaning, still in use today,
referring to a call-and-response prayer in which a series of lines are spoken alternately by a leader and a congregation.
We love how litany has developed in the intervening centuries three figurative senses,
and we love each of these as well.
first a sense meaning repetitive chant,
next the lengthy recitation sense owing to the repetitious and sometimes interminable nature of the original litany,