ostracize

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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

2025-11-01

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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for November 1, 2025 is: ostracize • AH-struh-syze  • verb To ostracize someone is to exclude them from a group by the agreement of the group's members. // She was ostracized by her community after refusing to sign the petition. See the entry > Examples: "Telling stories with affection and noodging, [comedian Sarah] Silverman has always been encouraged by her family, who embraced rather than ostracized her for revealing family secrets on the way to reaping howls of laughter." — Thelma Adams, The Boston Globe, 19 May 2025 Did you know? In ancient Greece, citizens whose power or influence threatened the stability of the state could be exiled by a practice involving voters writing that person's name down on a potsherd—a fragment of earthenware or pottery. Those receiving enough votes would then be subject to temporary exile from the state. Ostracize comes from the Greek verb ostrakízein (itself from the noun óstrakon meaning "potsherd"), used in 5th century Athens for the action of banishing someone by way of such a vote. Someone ostracized today is not exiled, but instead is excluded from a group by the agreement of the group's members.
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  • It's the word of the day for November 1st.

  • Today's word is ostracize, spelled O-S-T-R-A-C-I-Z-E.

  • Ostracize is a verb.

  • To ostracize someone is to exclude them from a group by the agreement of the group's members.

  • Here's the word used in a sentence from the Boston Globe.

  • Telling stories with affection and nudging,

  • comedian Sarah Silverman has always been encouraged by her family,

  • who embraced rather than ostracized her for revealing family secrets on the way to reaping howls of laughter.

  • In ancient Greece,

  • citizens whose power or influence threatened the stability of the state could be exiled by a practice involving voters writing that person's name down on a potchard,

  • a fragment of earthenware or pottery.

  • Those receiving enough votes would then be subject to temporary exile from the state.

  • Ostracize comes from the Greek verb ostracizine, itself from the noun ostracon, meaning potchard,

  • used in 5th century Athens for the action of banishing someone by way of such a vote.

  • Someone ostracized today is not exiled,

  • but instead is excluded from a group by the agreement of the group's members.

  • With your Word of the Day, I'm Peter Sokolowski.