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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for April 8, 2007 is:
longanimity \long-guh-NIM-uh-tee\ noun
: a disposition to bear injuries patiently : forbearance
Examples:
Grandmother bore the trials and tribulations of her life with longanimity.
Did you know?
"Longanimity" is a word with a long history. It came to English in the 15th century from the Late Latin adjective "longanimis," meaning "patient" or "long-suffering." "Longanimis," in turn, derives from the Latin combination of "longus" ("long") and "animus" ("soul"). "Longus" is related to the ancestors of our word "long" and is itself an ancestor to several other English words, including "longevity" ("long life"), "elongate" ("to make longer"), and "prolong" ("to lengthen in time").
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vocabularyword a daywordswordmerriamwebsterlanguageword of the daydictionaryenglishmerriam-webster