business
Supply Chain Entropy Busters: 3 Phases to Accelerate Processes 
business
Dr. Bernie Mullin Addresses Top 12 Social Ills in America
business
Founder Denise Mange Takes a Mindful Approach to Pet Guardianship
business
4 Ways to Grow Your Business With a POS System
business
Four Simple Ways to Navigate Uncertainty in Business
business
3 Essential ChatGPT Prompts to Better Understand Your Target Audience
business
How To Navigate Compliance in the Age of Remote Work
business
What Should a Workplace Wellness Initiative Entail?
business
Telegram: Is the First Amendment a Bulwark Against Global Tyranny?
business
Bunny Oliveira Connects Love and Language in Pet Care
business
Teamwork Challenge: Embrace the Power of “We”
business
How Top Philippines Call Centers Excel At HRM
business
How to Repair a Negative Online Reputation
business
Ralph Opacic’s Influence on Academic Achievement Beyond the Arts
business
Human Ethics: The Mindset of a Psychopath
basketball
entertainment
exercise
fashion
football
golf
knowledge
lifestyle
nation
odd_fun
religion
soccer
technology
upstate
wellness

Word of the Day

opine

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for January 22, 2025 is:

opine • \oh-PYNE\  • verb

To opine is to express an opinion about something.

// Many people opine that social media platforms should be better regulated.

See the entry >

Examples:

“Entertainment will always be inherently social. This latest age has prompted society to take a page out of video game culture, which has long relied on building a digital community. We text those we care about after a cliffhanger season finale and jump on social media to opine on the latest movie or show, sharing views on the best scenes or even recording oneself watching an intense scene for posting on social media.” — Geir Skaaden, Variety, 28 Aug. 2024

Did you know?

We are not opining—that is, expressing our opinion—when we say that opine is not a back-formation of opinion, though the two words do share a common ancestry. A back-formation is a word formed by the subtraction of part of an existing word; for instance, the verb bartend is a back-formation of the noun bartender. Opine and opinion, however, both entered English independently, taking different routes from their mutual roots in the Latin verb opīnārī, meaning “to have in mind” or “to think.” Opinion arrived in the 14th century, while opine followed about a century later.