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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for April 18, 2008 is:
rescript \REE-skript\ noun
1 : a written answer of a Roman emperor or of a pope to a legal inquiry or petition
2 : an official or authoritative order, decree, edict, or announcement
3 : an act or instance of rewriting
Examples:
The committee agreed on a rescript of the rules.
Did you know?
"Rescript" was first used in the 15th century for the written reply of a sovereign or pope to a question about some matter of law or state, and then for any type of authoritative declaration. These days, however, people are more likely to use it as a synonym of "rewrite," a use that began in the 19th century. Charlotte Brontë, for one, used it in her novel Villette. "I wrote [the letter] three times . . . subduing the phrases at every rescript," her narrator confesses.
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Topics
wordwordsenglishmerriam-websterdictionarylanguagemerriamwebsterword of the dayword a dayvocabulary