It's the Word of the Day for March 20th.
Today's word is eureka, spelled E-U-R-E-K-A.
Eureka is an adjective.
As an interjection, it's used to express excitement when a discovery has been made.
When used as an adjective, eureka describes something, typically a moment, that is characterized by a usually sudden, triumphant discovery.
Here's the word used in a sentence from nola.com.
Back in 2020, Troutman and fellow college student Max Stites were lamenting
the unrelenting loss of Louisiana wetlands while sharing a bottle of wine.
It was a eureka moment as Troutman and Stites realized that by crushing wine bottles
and other disposable glass into sand, they could relieve pressure on landfills and simultaneously help fend off coastal erosion.
When people exclaim Eureka, they are harking back to a legendary event
in the life of the Greek mathematician and inventor Archimedes.
While wrestling with the problem of how to determine the purity of gold,
he had the sudden realization that the buoyancy of an object placed
in water is equal in magnitude to the weight of the water the object displaces.
According to one popular version of the legend, he made his discovery at a public bathhouse,
whereupon he leapt out of his bath, exclaiming in Greek, Eureka!
I have found it!
And ran home naked through the streets.
The absence of a contemporary source for this anecdote has done nothing to diminish its popularity over the centuries.