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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day · Merriam-Webster

February 23, 20112m 25s

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Show Notes

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for February 23, 2011 is: edacious • \ih-DAY-shus\  • adjective 1 : having a huge appetite : ravenous 2 : excessively eager : insatiable Examples: My edacious dining companion could always be counted on to order the largest -- and often most expensive -- item on the menu. "My adoration is edacious, idolatrous. I have loved a lot of cakes. And I have loved some of them in shameful ways." -- From Leslie F. Miller's 2009 memoir Let Me Eat Cake: A Celebration of Flour, Sugar, Butter, Eggs, Vanilla, Baking Powder, and a Pinch of Salt Did you know? "Tempus edax rerum." That wise Latin line by the Roman poet Ovid translates as "Time, the devourer of all things." Ovid's correlation between rapaciousness and time is appropriate to a discussion of "edacious." That English word is a descendant of Latin "edax," which is a derivative of the verb "edere," meaning "to eat." In its earliest known English uses, "edacious" meant "of or relating to eating." It later came to be used generally as a synonym of "voracious," and it has often been used specifically in contexts referring to time. That's how Scottish essayist and historian Thomas Carlyle used it when he referred to events "swallowed in the depths of edacious Time. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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englishwebsterword of the daymerriam-websterword a daymerriamwordvocabularywordslanguagedictionary