It's the word of the day for November 13th.
Today's word is peremptory, spelled P-E-R-E-M-P-T-O-R-Y.
peremptory is an adjective.
It's a formal word used especially in legal contexts to describe an order or command that requires immediate compliance with no opportunity to show why one should not comply.
It's also used disapprovingly to describe someone with an arrogant attitude or something indicative of such an attitude.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the wide, wide sea.
Imperial ambition, first contact,
and the fateful final voyage of Captain James Cook by Hampton Sides.
Cook had changed.
He seemed restless and preoccupied.
There was a peremptory tone, a raw edge in some of his dealings.
Perhaps he had started to believe his own celebrity.
or perhaps showing his age and the long toll of so many rough miles at sea,
he had become less tolerant of the hardships and drudgeries of trans-oceanic sailing.
Peremptory comes from the Latin verb perimere,
meaning to take entirely or to destroy, which in turn combines the prefix pair,
P-E-R, meaning throughout or thoroughly, and the verb emere, meaning to take.
Peremptory implies the removal of one's option to disagree or contest something,
and sometimes suggests an abrupt dictatorial manner combined with an unwillingness to tolerate disobedience or dissent,
as in, employees given a peremptory dismissal.