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Jun 1, 2026
This week’s theme
Book titles that became words

This week’s words
brave new world

brave new world
First edition cover
Cover: Chatto & Windus / Wikimedia

Previous week’s theme
A lexical daisy chain

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A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Garg

A good title names a book. A great title names the world beyond it. These titles escape their bindings and walk straight into the language.

This week we feature words and phrases from book titles that have done just that. They have become shorthand for whole ways of seeing: a manufactured future, a brilliant dinner companion, a collapse into savagery, a mock-heroic style, and a surreal scenario.

In short, these books got read. And they got tenure in English.

For terms from film titles that have entered the language, see here and here.

brave new world

PRONUNCIATION:
(brayv noo/nyoo WUHRLD)

MEANING:
noun: A radically transformed world, situation, or era, especially one with both promise and peril.

ETYMOLOGY:
After Brave New World (1932), a novel by Aldous Huxley. Earliest documented use: 1933.

NOTES:
The world in Huxley’s dystopian novel is technologically advanced, but individual freedom has been traded for stability, conditioning, consumption, and chemical contentment. The future arrives with everything included except the user’s soul.

Huxley took the title of his novel from Shakespeare’s The Tempest, in which Miranda says:
“O, wonder!
 How many goodly creatures are there here!
 How beauteous mankind is! O, brave new world,
 That has such people in ‘t!”

USAGE:
“A rigorous humanities education produces informed citizens, well-equipped to adapt, thrive, and lead in the unpredictable brave new world that’s emerging.”
Shawna Dolansky; Keep Classrooms AI-Free; Maclean’s (Toronto, Canada); Dec 2025.

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
The animal shall not be measured by man. In a world older and more complete than ours, they move finished and complete, gifted with extension of the senses we have lost or never attained, living by voices we shall never hear. They are not brethren; they are not underlings; they are other nations, caught with ourselves in the net of life and time, fellow prisoners of the splendor and travail of the earth. -Henry Beston, naturalist and author (1 Jun 1888-1968)

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