The Word of the Day podcast for April 19th.
Today's word is nugatory, spelled N-U-G-A-T-O-R-Y.
Nugatory is an adjective.
In law, nugatory describes something such as a statute or agreement without operative legal effect.
Something described as nugatory is of little or no consequence.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Art Monthly.
In fact, the purchase price of £2,297 sterling was nugatory,
Public outrage, fanned by the press, did not engage with the work,
Rather, nugatory is literally trifling because the two words are synonymous,
but the issue was never really about price, but about rejecting the new and the challenging in art.
but focused instead on taxpayers' money having been squandered on a worthless pile of bricks.
Just because the word nugatory isn't the most common one in the English language doesn't mean it's trifling.
as in comments too nugatory to merit attention.
Nugatory first appeared in English in the 17th century.
It comes from the Latin adjective nugatorius, which can mean not only trifling or frivolous, but also futile.
This sense carried over into English as well, and so in some contexts, nugatory means ineffective or having no force,
as when Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Marilynne Robinson invoked the nugatory value of the contemporary penny.
Nugatory may mean little to some, but we think it's worth a pretty penny.
With your Word of the Day, I'm Peter Sokolowski.
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