proximity

Published: March 2, 2024, 5 a.m.

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\n \n Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 2, 2024 is:\n \n

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\n proximity • \\prahk-SIM-uh-tee\\  • noun
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Proximity is the quality or state of being near or proximate. The word proximity is synonymous with closeness.

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// The apartment's proximity to hiking trails is a definite plus.

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See the entry >

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\n Examples:
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"... research on employee proximity conducted at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York found that sitting near senior colleagues led junior engineers to learn more and to be less likely to leave their jobs, an effect that was particularly pronounced for women and younger employees." \u2014 Amy Edmondson, WIRED, 8 Jan. 2024

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\n Did you know?
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The fact that the star closest in proximity to our sun (approximately 4.2 light-years distant) is named Proxima Centauri is no coincidence. The history of proximity hinges on the idea of closeness, both physical and metaphorical. English speakers borrowed the word from Middle French, which in turn acquired it from forms of the Latin adjective proximus, meaning "nearest" or "next." Close relatives of proximity in English include proximal, proximate, and the somewhat more rare approximal (meaning "contiguous"). A number of other languages, including Catalan, Portuguese, and Italian, have similar words that come from the Latin proximus.

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