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Monday, November 28th, 2016

    Time Event
    12:00a
    vicissitude

    Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for November 28, 2016 is:

    vicissitude • \vuh-SISS-uh-tood\  • noun

    1 : the quality or state of being changeable : mutability

    2 a : a favorable or unfavorable event or situation that occurs by chance : a fluctuation of state or condition

    b : a difficulty or hardship usually beyond one's control

    Examples:

    "The vicissitudes of life strike us all. But when life gets difficult for the poor, economically or emotionally, or most often both at once, it can pitch them into complete chaos."  The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 22 Aug. 2016

    "A good coach on tour is at once a friend and a taskmaster, a psychologist and an emotional buffer against the vicissitudes of competing at the highest level of the game."  Geoff Macdonald, The New York Times, 1 Sept. 2016

    Did you know?

    "Change is not made without inconvenience, even from worse to better," wrote British theologian Richard Hooker in the 16th century. That observation may shed some light on vicissitude, a word that can refer simply to the fact of change, or to an instance of it, but that often refers specifically to hardship or difficulty brought about by change. To survive "the vicissitudes of life" is thus to survive life's ups and downs, with special emphasis on the downs. Vicissitude is a descendant of the Latin noun vicis, meaning "change" or "alternation," and it has been a part of the English language since the 16th century. In contemporary usage, it most often occurs in the plural.



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