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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for June 4, 2015 is:
swan song \SWAHN-SAWNG\ noun
1 : a song of great sweetness said to be sung by a dying swan
2 : a farewell appearance or final act or pronouncement
Examples:
Professor Holland gave the final lecture of his long career, and his swan song was met with a standing ovation from his students.
"In hisswan songas Major League Baseball commissioner last year, Bud Selig scheduled Opening Day in Australia. Because, hey, nothing says spring and baseball more than playing the first game of the season at 3 a.m. 7,500 miles away from the nearest U.S. ballpark." - Norman Chad, Chicago Sun-Times, April 11, 2015
Did you know?
Swans don't sing. They whistle or trumpet, or in the case of the swan most common in ponds, the mute swan, they only hiss and snort. But according to ancient legend, the swan does sing one beautiful song in its life-just before it dies. References in English to the dying swan's lovely singing go back as far as Chaucer, but the term swan song itself didn't appear in the language until the 1830s, when Thomas Carlyle used it in Sartor Resartus. Carlyle probably based his "swan song" on the German version of the term, which is Schwanengesang or Schwanenlied.
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