It's the Word of the Day podcast for January 9th.
Today's word is Inocuous, spelled I-N-N-O-C-U-O-U-S.
Inocuous is an adjective.
It describes either something that is not likely to bother or offend anyone as in an innocuous comment,
or something that causes no injury or is otherwise considered harmless as in an innocuous prank.
Here's the word used in a sentence from NBC News.
Strong solar storms can be dangerous for astronauts in space,
and can cause problems for GPS systems and satellites.
But solar storms can also have more innocuous consequences on Earth,
such as supercharged displays of the northern lights.
Inocuous is rooted in a lack of harm.
It comes from the Latin adjective inocuous, which was formed by combining the negative prefix in,
i-n, with a form of the verb no care, meaning to harm or to hurt.
It first appeared in print in the early 1600s with the meaning harmless,
causing no injury, as in an innocuous gas,
and soon developed a second metaphorical sense used to describe something that does not offend or cause hurt feelings,
as in an innocuous comment.
Innocent followed the same trajectory centuries before its negative i-n prefix joined with the Latin no-kent,
no-kens, meaning wicked, which also comes from no-kere.
This is not to say that no-kere has only contributed words that semantically negate the harm inherent in the root.