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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for September 7, 2007 is:
miasma \mye-AZ-muh\ noun
1 : a vaporous exhalation formerly believed to cause disease; also : a heavy vaporous emanation or atmosphere
2 : an influence or atmosphere that tends to deplete or corrupt; also : an atmosphere that obscures : fog
Examples:
Hallie couldn't wait to escape the miasma of petty rivalry that had enveloped the team and stifled her growth as a player.
Did you know?
In notes taken during a voyage to South America on HMS Beagle in the 1830s, Charles Darwin described an illness that he believed was caused by "miasma" emanating from stagnant pools of water. For him, "miasma" had the same meaning that it did when it first appeared in English in the 1600s: an emanation of a vaporous disease-causing substance. ("Miasma," by the way, comes from Greek "miainein," meaning "to pollute."). But while Darwin was at sea, broader applications of "miasma" were starting to spread. Nowadays, we know germs are the source of infection, so we're more likely to use the newer, more figurative sense of "miasma," which refers to something destructive or demoralizing that surrounds or permeates.
*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.
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dictionarymerriamwordsword of the dayvocabularywebsterword a daylanguagemerriam-websterwordenglish