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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for December 8, 2015 is:
adamantine \ad-uh-MAN-teen\ adjective
1 : made of or having the quality of adamant
2 : rigidly firm : unyielding
3 : resembling the diamond in hardness or luster
Examples:
The ushers were adamantine in their refusal to let latecomers into the theater.
"Lampard and Pirlo have been adamantine, but even Lampard fell prey to injury this past season." — Rafael Noboa y Rivera, Hudson River Blue, 17 June 2015
Did you know?
The Greek and Latin word for the hardest imaginable substance, whether applied to a legendary stone or an actual substance, such as diamond, was adamas. Latin poets used the term figuratively for things lasting, firm, or unbending, and the adjective adamantinus was used in similar contexts. The English noun adamant (meaning "an unbreakable or extremely hard substance"), as well as the adjective adamant (meaning "inflexible" or "unyielding"), came from adamas. Adamantine, which also has such figurative uses as "rigid," "firm," and "unyielding," came from adamantinus. Adamas is actually the source of diamond as well. Diamas, the Latin term for diamond, was an alteration of adamas.
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Topics
englishwordsdictionarymerriamwordlanguageword of the dayword a dayvocabularywebstermerriam-webster