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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for January 30, 2007 is:
katzenjammer \KAT-zun-jam-er\ noun
1 : hangover
2 : distress
3 : a discordant clamor
Examples:
The morning after the wedding, Pamela woke up with a blinding katzenjammer.
Did you know?
Have you ever heard a cat wailing and felt that you could relate? Apparently some hungover German speakers once did. "Katzenjammer" comes from the German "Katze" (meaning "cat") and "Jammer" (meaning "distress"). English speakers borrowed the word for their hangovers (and other distressful inner states) in the 19th century and eventually applied it to outer commotion as well. The word isn't as popular in English today as it was around the mid-20th century, but it's well-known to many because of the "Katzenjammer Kids," a long-running comic strip featuring the incorrigibly mischievous twins Hans and Fritz.
*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.
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wordword of the dayword a daylanguagewordsenglishmerriammerriam-webstervocabularydictionarywebster