Word of the Day on Nostr: GM โ๏ธ Your word of the day is! ๐ค Umpteen [UMP-teen] ๐ What It Means: ...
GM โ๏ธ Your word of the day is!
๐ค Umpteen [UMP-teen]
๐ What It Means:
Umpteen is an informal adjective meaning "very many" or "indefinitely numerous."
๐ฐ Example:
The artist has painted the same subject umpteen times, yet each piece has its own unique quality.
๐ฌ In Context:
"The life of a showgirl often includes umpteen costume changes, elaborate props and copious amounts of hairspray." โ The Economist, 4 Oct. 2025
๐ก Did You Know?
There may not be a gazillion ways in English to refer to a large, indefinite number, but there are definitely more than a soupรงon. Many of these, such as zillion, bazillion, kazillion, jillion, and bajillion, start with -illion (as in million) and add a satisfying consonant or syllable in front for some extra oomph. The adjective umpteen does the same for -teen, with the oomph provided by the ump in umpty. Umpty, an adjective meaning "such and such" (as in "umpty percent" or "umpty-four") arose, like umpteen, in the latter half of the 1800s. We only occasionally use umpty these days, but you're bound to hear or read umpteen and umpteenth ("latest or last in an indefinitely numerous series") any number of times.
๐
https://www.merriam-webster.com/word-of-the-day#WordOfTheDay #Nostr #Dictionary #Learning
Published at
2026-02-24 14:00:00 UTCEvent JSON
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"content": "GM โ๏ธ Your word of the day is!\n\n๐ค Umpteen [UMP-teen]\n\n๐ What It Means:\nUmpteen is an informal adjective meaning \"very many\" or \"indefinitely numerous.\"\n\n๐ฐ Example:\nThe artist has painted the same subject umpteen times, yet each piece has its own unique quality.\n\n๐ฌ In Context:\n\"The life of a showgirl often includes umpteen costume changes, elaborate props and copious amounts of hairspray.\" โ The Economist, 4 Oct. 2025\n\n๐ก Did You Know?\nThere may not be a gazillion ways in English to refer to a large, indefinite number, but there are definitely more than a soupรงon. Many of these, such as zillion, bazillion, kazillion, jillion, and bajillion, start with -illion (as in million) and add a satisfying consonant or syllable in front for some extra oomph. The adjective umpteen does the same for -teen, with the oomph provided by the ump in umpty. Umpty, an adjective meaning \"such and such\" (as in \"umpty percent\" or \"umpty-four\") arose, like umpteen, in the latter half of the 1800s. We only occasionally use umpty these days, but you're bound to hear or read umpteen and umpteenth (\"latest or last in an indefinitely numerous series\") any number of times.\n\n๐ https://www.merriam-webster.com/word-of-the-day\n\n#WordOfTheDay #Nostr #Dictionary #Learning",
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