It's the word of the day for January 15th.
Today's word is cloying, spelled C-L-O-Y-I-N-G.
Cloying is an adjective.
It's used disapprovingly to describe something that is too sweet, pleasant, or sentimental.
Here's the word used in a sentence from The New Yorker by Margaret Talbot.
Images of her came to me often,
as did snatches of songs in her repertoire, which she sang to me as lullabies.
What I couldn't quite summon, despite what I thought of as my keen smell memory, was her fragrance.
As a kid, I had never liked it.
Beloja was heavy, spicy, and floral.
When my mother would lean over me to comb my hair,
the cloying rose and carnation combined with her tugging on my scalp always threatened to give me a headache.
Still, I missed that fragrance now.
The history of the word cloying isn't sweet.
It's tough as nails.
Cloying comes from the verb cloy, which in Middle English meant to hinder or seriously injure.
Its source is an Anglo-French word, meaning to prick a horse with a nail in shoeing.
The English word chloé too carried this farrier-y meaning,
a farrier being a person who shoes horses, in the early 16th century.
But it also had a general sense relating to clogging and stuffing,