vestige

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    • Jan 2009
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    #1

    vestige




    Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for February 10, 2025 is:





    vestige • \VESS-tij\ • noun


    A vestige is a trace, mark, or visible sign left by something lost or vanished.


    // The ruins here are the last vestiges of the Roman occupation in this part of Britain.


    See the entry >




    Examples:


    "Filled with vestiges of yesteryear, the Butte [Montana] historic district is one of the largest in the country." — Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs and Janie Osborne, The New York Times, 29 Dec. 2024




    Did you know?


    Though English is categorized as a Germanic language, there’s no denying the enormousness of Latin’s footprint on its lexicon. Among English’s plethora of Latin derivatives is vestige, a word that traces back to the Latin noun vestigium, meaning "footstep, footprint, or track." Like its forebear, vestige refers to a perceptible sign made by something that has passed, or to a tangible reminder, such as a fragment or remnant, of what is past and gone. Vestige also happens to be one of only a few vestiges of vestigium itself, along with the adjective vestigial ("remaining as the last part of something that existed before") and the familiar verb investigate.







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