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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for February 15, 2008 is:
whodunit \hoo-DUN-it\ noun
: a detective story or mystery story
Examples:
Betty packed several romance novels and whodunits to read at the beach.
Did you know?
In 1930, Donald Gordon, a book reviewer for News of Books, needed to come up with something to say about a rather unremarkable mystery novel called Half-Mast Murder. "A satisfactory whodunit," he wrote. The coinage played fast and loose with spelling and grammar, but "whodunit" caught on anyway. Other writers tried respelling it "who-done-it," and one even insisted on using "whodidit," but those sanitized versions lacked the punch of the original and have fallen by the wayside. "Whodunit" became so popular that by 1939 at least one language pundit had declared it "already heavily overworked" and predicted it would "soon be dumped into the taboo bin." History has proven that prophecy false, and "whodunit" is still going strong.
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Topics
vocabularyword of the daymerriamwordwordslanguageword a daymerriam-websterwebsterdictionaryenglish