👓 oracular


Merriam-Webster’s Word of the Day for June 27, 2026 is:

oracular • \aw-RAK-yuh-ler\  • adjective

Oracular is a formal word that can describe something used to forecast or prophesize, or something that resembles or relates to something used for such purposes. Oracular can also describe something that resembles an oracle—a person (such as a priestess of ancient Greece) through whom a deity is believed to speak; in this sense, an oracular statement, voice, etc. conveys wisdom or solemnity.

// A few recordings of the famous speaker still exist, and though his language is formal to the point of sounding almost foreign to the modern listener, the oracular quality of his speech remains effective.

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Examples:

“The conversation that unfolds is some of [writer Ben] Lerner’s most brilliant and daring writing to date, a mad, oracular burst of speech—about technology, parenthood, and dreaming—that flits effortlessly between prose and poetry.” — Kevin Lozano, Vulture, 3 Apr. 2026

Did you know?

When the ancient Greeks had questions or problems, they would turn to the gods for answers by consulting an oracle, a person through whom the gods communicated, usually in the form of cryptic verse. Oracle also referred to the god’s answer or to the shrine that worshippers approached when seeking advice; the word’s root is the Latin verb orare, which means “to speak.” English speakers today can use oracle to simply refer to an authoritative pronouncement or to a person who makes such pronouncements—for example, “a designer who is an oracle of fashion.” And the related adjective oracular is used in similar contexts: “a designer who is an oracular voice of fashion.”

via Merriam-Webster’s Word of the Day https://ift.tt/L7dKb42

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Mother. Partner. Jew by Choice. Artist. Master Naturalist. Reiki Master. Thanatologist. Card Slinger. Knitter. Stitcher. Dancer. Poet. Neurodivergent. Spoonie. Survivor.

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