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Mar 26, 2026
This week’s theme
Writers painting with words

This week’s words
symbiosis
genuflection
juvenescent
exegesis

exegesis
Saint Jerome in His Study, 1514
Engraving: Albrecht Dürer

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exegesis

PRONUNCIATION:
(ek-suh-JEE-sis)

MEANING:
noun: An explanation or interpretation, especially a critical interpretation of a text.

ETYMOLOGY:
From Greek exegesis, from exegeisthai (to interpret), from ex- (out) + hegeisthai (to lead). Earliest documented use: 1600.

USAGE:
“Seeing Greg Abbott, the Texas governor, in the crowd, he went on a very long exegesis about building the border wall in Texas. He sounded like a beat poet of concrete.”
Maureen Dowd; Trump Has Everyone Just Where He Wants Them; The New York Times; Jan 20, 2025.

See more usage examples of exegesis in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary.

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Devils can be driven out of the heart by the touch of hand on hand, or mouth on mouth. -Tennessee Williams, dramatist (26 Mar 1911-1983)

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