It's the Word of the Day podcast for November 15th.
Today's word is radial, spelled R-A-D-I-A-L.
Radial is an adjective.
It describes things that are arranged or have parts arranged in straight lines coming out from the center of a circle.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Architecture Update.
Inspired by flowers that grow organically,
the project transforms organic patterns into space arrangements, embodying the idea of blooming.
The design distills the essence of a flower's radial symmetry into a geometric language,
creating a rhythmic play of radial patterns and sunburst lines.
Picture the sun shining brightly on a cloudless day.
Its rays stretch in every direction, along radiant radii, so far reaching they radiate daylight.
It's pretty rad,
and it's a cinch to describe in English thanks to the expansive influence of the Latin noun radius,
meaning ray.
As you might have guessed, radius is an ancestor of the English words ray,
radiant, radiate, and of course, radius.
It's also the sunny source of the word radial,
which joined our language in the 1500s as an adjective meaning arranged or having parts arranged like rays.
Radial has burgeoned in meaning over the centuries,
adopting unique applications across many fields, including medicine, engineering, and astronomy.