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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for September 6, 2008 is:
sanguine \SANG-gwin\ adjective
1 : bloodred
2 : ruddy
3 : confident, optimistic
Examples:
The coach remained sanguine about his team's chances in the playoffs, even though his star player was injured.
Did you know?
"Sanguine" has quite a few relatives in English, including a few that might sound familiar to Word of the Day readers. "Sangfroid" ("self-possession especially under strain") and "sanguineous" ("bloodthirsty") are consanguineous with "sanguine." ("Consanguineous," meaning "descended from the same ancestor," is another former Word of the Day.) The tie that binds these words is "sanguis," the Latin word for blood. "Exsanguination" ("the draining or losing of blood"), "sanguinary" ("murderous" or "bloody"), and the rare "sangsue" ("leech") and "sanguinolent" ("tinged with blood") are also "sanguis" relatives. That's something you can raise a glass of "sangaree" or "sangria" ("a usually iced punch made of red wine, fruit juice, and soda water") to!
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Topics
wordmerriamwebsterwordsvocabularyenglishword a daylanguagemerriam-websterdictionaryword of the day