Word of the Day

… courtesy of Merriam Webster, with slight modifications by me:

The Word of the Day for August 03, 2009 is:
daymare •
\DAY-mair\ • noun

: a nightmarish fantasy experienced while awake

Felix’s Example Sentence:

As his car careened into the intersection out of control, the driver felt he was in a daymare, unable to change his course.

Did you know?

Long ago, the word “nightmare” designated an evil spirit that made its victims feel like they were suffocating in their sleep (prompting physician-botanist William Turner to introduce “a good remedy agaynst the stranglyng of the nyght mare” in 1562). By the early 1700s, the Age of Reason had arrived, nightmares were bad dreams, and “daymare” was a logically analogous choice when English speakers sought a word for a frightening and uncontrollable fantasy, a run-away daydream. And since the 1800s, when Charles Dickens wrote “a monstrous load that I was obliged to bear, a daymare that there was no possibility of breaking in, a weight that brooded on my wits” in David Copperfield, we’ve been using “daymare” figuratively. For example, today we might refer to “a logistical daymare.”

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