It's the Word of the Day podcast for February 22nd.
Today's word is foray, spelled F-O-R-A-Y.
Foray is a noun.
A foray is an initial and often hesitant attempt to do something in a new or different field or area of activity,
as in the novelist's foray into nonfiction.
In martial contexts, foray means a sudden or irregular invasion or attack for war or spoils.
Here's the word used in a sentence from USA Today.
Brian Escarino's foray into fashion was the result of happenstance.
In 2018, the designer who was born and raised in Venice,
California bought a green vintage singer sewing machine at a garage sale determined to learn to make the perfect pair of denim pants.
He began honing his sewing skills,
eventually crafting cut-and-sew flannel shirts that caught the eye of his colleagues at LA's Wasteland,
a high-end resale boutique.
For centuries, Forre referred only to a sudden or irregular invasion or attack,
but in the late 19th century, it began to venture into gentler, semantic territory.
While the newer sense of foray still involves a trek into a foreign territory,
the travel is figurative.
When you make this kind of foray, you dabble in an area, occupation, or pastime that's new to you.
Take the particularly apt example, stay tuned, of mushroom hunting.
The likely ancestor of foray is an Anglo-French word referring to the violent sort who do invasion forays,