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\n \n Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for April 20, 2024 is:\n \n
\n \n\n gingerly • \\JIN-jer-lee\\ • adjective
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An act or manner described as gingerly is very cautious or careful.
\n\n// It\u2019s a delicate subject, and we need to approach it with gingerly care and tact.
\n\n// The antelope moved with a gingerly gait that suggested it was hurt.
\n\n\n \n \n\n Examples:
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\u201cNote: bears do not in a gingerly manner put their paws against each stem of a lovely ripe pear and gently pull upward against the branch, the proper harvesting method. \u2018Picked\u2019 in bear-lingo means tearing down carefully constructed tree cages and knocking as many branches to the ground as needed; then taking several bites out of each luscious pear, leaving scattered remnants all over the ground ...\u201d \u2014 Cate Gable, The Chinook Observer (Long Beach, Washington), 14 Oct. 2020
\n \n \n\n Did you know?
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Though more common as an adverb meaning \u201cvery cautiously and carefully,\u201d as in \u201cmoving gingerly across the icy pond,\u201d gingerly has for more than four centuries functioned both as an adverb and as an adjective. Etymologists take a gingerly approach to assigning any particular origins to gingerly. While it might have come from the name of the spice, there\u2019s nothing concrete to back up that idea. Another theory is that it\u2019s related to an Old French word, gen\xe7or, meaning \u201cprettier\u201d or \u201cmore beautiful,\u201d with evidence being that in 16th century English an earlier sense of gingerly often described dancing or walking done with dainty steps. It wasn\u2019t until the 17th century that gingerly was applied to movements done with caution in order to avoid being noisy or causing injury, and to a wary manner in handling or presenting ideas.
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