It's the Word of the Day podcast for March 12th.
Today's word is gambit, spelled G-A-M-B-I-T.
Gambit is a noun.
A gambit is something done or said in order to gain an advantage or to produce a desired effect.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the New York Times.
Now the book publishing industry has sent a message to all AI companies.
Our intellectual property isn't yours for the taking, and you cannot act with impunity.
This settlement is an opening gambit in a critical battle that will be waged for years to come.
Don't let the similarities of sound and general flavor between the words gambit and gamble trip you up.
The two are unrelated.
Gambit first appeared in English in a 1656 chess handbook that was said to feature almost a hundred illustrated gambits.
Gambit, G-A-M-B-E-T-T,
traces back first to the Spanish word gambito,
and before that to the Italian gambetto, from gamba, meaning leg.
Gambetto referred to the act of tripping someone, as in wrestling, in order to gain an advantage.
In chess,
gambit originally referred to a chess opening whereby the bishop's pawn is intentionally sacrificed or tripped to gain an advantage in position.
Gambit is now also applied to many other chess openings, but after being pinned down for years,
it finally broke free of chess's hold and is used generally to refer to any move,
whether literal or rhetorical, done to get a leg up, so to speak.