It's the word of the day for October 24th.
Today's word is rancid, spelled R-A-N-C-I-D.
Rancid is an adjective.
It usually describes something edible that has a strong and unpleasant smell or taste
because it's no longer fresh.
In figurative use, rancid describes things that are very distasteful or offensive.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the New York Times.
Rancid and putrid and fetid.
Oh my, all three words are used to describe unpleasant smells and tastes,
and each traces its roots to a stinky Latin word.
Rancid can be traced back to rancare.
The root of putrid shares an ancestor with putere, and fetid comes from fotere.
All verbs meaning to stink.
Not long after entering the language in the early 17th century,
Rancid also developed a second figurative sense,
which is used for non-gustatory and non-olfactory senses, as in rancid hypocrisy.
With your Word of the Day, I'm Peter Sokolowski.