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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for January 6, 2014 is:
behest \bih-HEST\ noun
1 : an authoritative order : command
2 : an urgent prompting
Examples:
At the manager's behest, several of us stayed to work late so that we could finish the project ahead of the deadline.
"They say the constitutional separation of powers blocks the panel-created at the governor's behest-from policing the legislative branch." - From an editorial in The New York Post, November 29, 2013
Did you know?
Today's word first appeared in 12th century Old English as "behλst," which is formed from the prefix "be-" and the Old English verb "hātan" ("to command" or "to promise"). While "behest" was originally used only in the sense of "promise," it acquired the additional sense of "command" among speakers of Middle English. Among contemporary English speakers, "behest" is no longer used in the sense of "promise" but rather denotes an authoritative or urgent request or command. Old English "hātan" also gave English the now-archaic words "hest" (meaning "command") and "hight" ("being called or named").
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word of the dayvocabularyword a daylanguagewordswebsterenglishdictionarywordmerriam-webstermerriam