It's the Word of the Day podcast for October 31st.
Today's word is Hobgoblin, spelled H-O-B-G-O-B-L-I-N.
Hobgoblin is a noun.
A hobgoblin is a mischievous goblin that plays tricks in children's stories.
When used figuratively, hobgoblin refers to something that causes fear or worry.
Here's the word used in a sentence from The Hollywood Reporter.
Vampires and zombies took a big bite out of the horror box office in Sinners and 28 years later,
and with Del Toro's Frankenstein hitting theaters next week,
it would seem that a return to classic marquee monsters is one of the stories of this summer's movie season.
But there's one old-school hobgoblin that's lurking around the edges of this narrative, omnipresent,
repeated across a number of notable new titles, but still somehow avoiding the limelight, the witch.
While a goblin is traditionally regarded in folklore as a grotesque evil and malicious creature,
a hobgoblin tends to be more of a playful troublemaker.
The character of Puck from Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream might be regarded as one.
First appearing in English in the early 1500s,
Hobgoblin combined goblin ultimately from the Greek word for rogue with hob, a word from hobba,
a nickname for Robert that was used both for clownish louts and rustics and in fairy tales for a mischievous sprite or elf.
The American writer Ralph Waldo Emerson famously applied the words extended sense in his essay Self-Reliance with this sentence,
a foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds adored by little statesmen and philosophers and divines.
With your Word of the Day, I'm Peter Sokolowski.