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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for October 10, 2007 is:
betwixt \bih-TWIKST\ adverb or preposition
: between
Examples:
"A relative newbie as satellites go will glide betwixt a crescent moon and the Red Planet tonight on its way to the Little Dipper." (Thomas Stauffer, Arizona Daily Star, March 2, 2006)
Did you know?
"Jack Sprat could eat no fat, his wife could eat no lean; and so betwixt the two of them, they licked the platter clean." Perhaps you've always said "and so between the two of them" when reciting the tale of Jack Sprat and his wife. That's fine. "Betwixt" and "between" have similar origins: they both come from a combination of "be-" and related Old English roots. Both words appeared before the 12th century, but use of "betwixt" dropped off considerably toward the end of the 1600s. It survived in the phrase "betwixt and between" ("neither one thing nor the other"), which took on a life of its own in the 18th century. Nowadays "betwixt" is uncommon, but it isn't archaic; it's simply used more consciously than "between."
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Topics
merriam-websterword a dayenglishwebstervocabularyword of the daywordsmerriamlanguageworddictionary