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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for July 27, 2011 is:
volition \voh-LISH-un\ noun
1 : an act of making a choice or decision; also : a choice or decision made
2 : the power of choosing or determining : will
Examples:
The employee left the company of his own volition.
"I'd been promoting a novel non-stop for four months, advancing through my schedule without volition, feeling more and more like the graphical lozenge on a media player's progress bar." -- From an article by Jonathan Franzen in The New Yorker, April 18, 2011
Did you know?
"Volition" ultimately derives from the Latin verb "velle," meaning "to will" or "to wish." (The adjective "voluntary" descends from the same source.) English speakers borrowed the term from French in the 17th century, using it at first to mean "an act of choosing." Its earliest known English use appeared in Thomas Jackson's 1615 Commentaries upon the Apostle's Creed: "That such acts, again, as they appropriate to the will, and call volitions, are essentially and formally intellections, is most evident." The second sense of "volition," meaning "the power to choose," had developed by the mid-18th century.
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merriamenglishlanguagedictionaryvocabularyword of the daymerriam-websterwebsterwordsword a dayword