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Aug 13, 2019
This week’s themeWords from space travel This week’s words moon shot light-year rocket science lift-off space cadet
Milky Way galaxy, our home in space, about 200,000 light years across
Illustration: Nick Risinger / Wikimedia
A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Garglight-year
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
noun: 1. A unit of length equal to the distance traveled by light in one year in a vacuum, about 5.88 trillion miles or 9.46 trillion km. 2. Very far, in distance or time. ETYMOLOGY:
From light, from Old English leoht + year, from Old English gear.
Earliest documented use: 1888.
NOTES:
A light-year is a unit of distance -- there’s no such unit as
a heavy-year (nor is there a dark-year). To get a light-year’s worth of
frequent-flier miles you’d need to travel between New York and Moscow
only a little over a billion times.
USAGE:
“Baseball under Manfred’s leadership moved a light-year ahead of the NFL
when it came to sensitivity toward people of color by setting an example
in its sport about what would no longer be acceptable in branding.” Kevin B. Blackistone; MLB’s Manfred Led the Way. Will the NFL Choose to Follow?; The Washington Post; Feb 12, 2019. See more usage examples of light-year in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
The Supreme Ethical Rule: Act so as to elicit the best in others and
thereby in thyself. -Felix Adler, professor, lecturer, and reformer (13 Aug
1851-1933)
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