It's the Word of the Day podcast for March 18th.
Today's word is Jejun, spelled J-E-J-U-N-E.
Jejun is an adjective.
It's a formal word that means uninteresting or boring.
It's also used as a synonym of the word juvenile, to describe things such as behaviors or attitudes that are immature, childish, or simplistic.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the Irish Times.
The term comes to us from the Latin word jejunus, which means empty of food, hungry, or meager.
When English speakers first used jejun back in the late 1600s, they applied it in ways that mirrored the meaning of its Latin parent,
lamenting jejun appetites and jejun morsels.
Something that is meager rarely satisfies, and before long, jejun was being used not only for meager meals
or hunger, but also for things lacking in intellectual or emotional substance.
It's possible that the word gained its now popular juvenile or childish sense when people confused it with the look-alike French word jeune,
which means young.
With your Word of the Day, I'm Peter Sokolowski.
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