© Copyright Hello! Magazine
lifestyle
Shania Twain's secret 'hideaway' with rarely-seen husband 
© Copyright LIVE SCIENCE
science
Electric cars: Facts about the vehicles that are reshaping road transport
© Copyright Interesting Engineering
technology
160-million-year-old footprints reveal how flying dinosaur cousins conquered land
© Copyright Hello! Magazine
lifestyle
This is the exact hair serum Nara Smith uses to maintain her thick glossy bob

UPSTATE
Peaceful protest held outside Stefanik fundraiser
       
UPSTATE
Dennis Drue released from jail after plea deal
       
AUTO
The BMW 2 Series Gran Coupe Successor Might Be A Rear-Drive EV
       
LONG_ISLAND
Three Village mourns heroic FDNY Capt. Greg Schmidt, father of three
       
ART
Architectural Textiles by Sarah Zapata Explore Material Culture and Intersecting Identities
       
FOOD
BrewDog revamps its popular Elvis Juice IPA
       
SHOPPING
Hoka Brings Back a Legendary Trail Shoe That’s as Flashy as It Is Technical
       
WELLNESS
Is It Safe to Eat Moldy Bread—and How Can You Stop It From Going Bad So Fast?
       
ANIMAL
Cool water could protect sea stars from a mysterious disease
       
BOOK
Homeward bound with 3 picture books
       
NEW YORK WEATHER
art
beauty
connecticut
fashion
football
game
lifestyle
long_island
nutrition
odd_fun
politics
religion
science
wellness
world

Word of the Day

ziggurat

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for May 2, 2025 is:

ziggurat • \ZIG-uh-rat\  • noun

A ziggurat is an ancient Mesopotamian temple consisting of a pyramidal structure built in successive stages with outside staircases and a shrine at the top. The word ziggurat is also sometimes used for a similarly shaped structure.

// Ancient ziggurats were always built with a core of mud brick and an exterior covered with baked brick. They had no internal chambers and were usually square or rectangular.

See the entry >

Examples:

"The Breuer building, the former home of the Whitney Museum on New York's Upper East Side, counts as one of the defining buildings of the [brutalist] movement. Completed in 1966, it was designed by Marcel Breuer, who envisioned the structure as an inverted ziggurat." — Alex Greenberger, Art in America, 14 Jan. 2025

Did you know?

French professor of archaeology François Lenormant spent a great deal of time poring over ancient Assyrian texts. In those cuneiform inscriptions, he pieced together a long-forgotten language, now known as Akkadian, which proved valuable to our understanding of the ancient civilization. Through his studies, he became familiar with the Akkadian word for Mesopotamia’s towering, stepped temples: ziqqurratu, which stepped into English as ziggurat.



😆🏰 #nakyung #choreography #dance #rapunzel
The Real Reason Potatoes Taste So Much Better At A Steakhouse
Lunchbox Made with Love | Real Korean Cooking Stories
We Put Liquid Eggs to the Test to See If They're Just As Good As Real Eggs | Delish
We Belong Together 👫 – Ritchie Valens - Los Lobos / Guitar Intro / MusikMan
Inside the Mind of Bad Bunny | Vogue
Jessie Murph Plays Yeehaw or Naw: Stagecoach Edition
Quietly Cooking A Venezuelan Dish - Quiet Kitchen With Daniela Nieves
Bella Ramsey Makes ‘The Last of Us’ Themed Lunch with Vogue | Now Serving