salubrious

Published: March 4, 2024, 5 a.m.

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\\n \\n Merriam-Webster\'s Word of the Day for March 4, 2024 is:\\n \\n

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\\n salubrious • \\\\suh-LOO-bree-us\\\\  • adjective
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Salubrious is a formal word that means \\u201cfavorable to or promoting health or well-being.\\u201d

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// They picked up several salubrious habits on their wellness retreat in Bali.

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\\n Examples:
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\\u201cDespite their salubrious sounding name, fruit flies ... eat food that is decaying. They inhabit rubbish bins, compost heaps or any place where food is present, including drains.\\u201d \\u2014 Primrose Freestone, The Conversation, 31 Aug. 2023

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Salubrious, like healthful and wholesome, describes things that are favorable to the health of the mind or body. (A rather formal and somewhat rare word, it is related by its Latin ancestor salubris to the very common English word safe.) Unlike healthful and wholesome, salubrious tends to apply chiefly to the helpful effects of climate or air, as in \\u201cthe salubrious climate of the tropical island.\\u201d Salubrious seems to be expanding semantically; we occasionally see evidence of it being used as a descriptor of prosperous people or locales. This is the sense used by British author Zadie Smith in her 2023 historical novel The Fraud when she writes: \\u201cFollowing the more salubrious element of the crowd, they found themselves on the second floor of Lady Blessington\\u2019s Old Gore House, recently converted into a restaurant by Alexis Soyer.\\u201d

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