It's the word of the day for November 27th.
Today's word is cornucopia, spelled C-O-R-N-U-C-O-P-I-A.
Cornucopia is a noun.
A cornucopia, also known as a horn of plenty,
is a curved, hollow goat's horn or similarly shaped receptacle,
such as a horn-shaped basket that is overflowing, especially with fruit and vegetables.
The image of a cornucopia is commonly used as a decoration and as a symbol of abundance,
but the word cornucopia is today more often encountered in its metaphorical use,
referring to an overflowing abundance or to a seemingly inexhaustible amount of something.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the Orange County Register.
It was rather dark in there, however,
the counters and their cornucopia of offerings were brightly lit.
Want chocolate bars, nasal sprays, gummy bears, bath bombs, tinctures,
vapes, mints, jellies, peanut butter cups, lemonade, fruit punch?
The word cornucopia comes from the late Latin phrase cornucopiae,
which translates literally as horn of plenty.
A traditional staple of feasts,
the cornucopia is believed to represent the horn of a goat from Greek mythology.
According to legend,
it was from this horn which could be filled with whatever the owner wished that the god Zeus was fed as an infant by his nurse,