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extricate
Merriam-Webster’s Word of the Day for October 12, 2021 is:
extricate EK-struh-kayt verb
Extricate means “to free or remove someone or something from an entanglement or difficulty.”
// Firefighters extricated the passengers from the wreckage.
// The wife of the accused hired an attorney to extricate herself from the allegations brought against her husband.
Examples:
“The skylight has been lifted off Toland Hall to create an opening large enough to extricate the panels by crane.” — Sam Whiting, The San Francisco Chronicle, 31 Aug. 2021
Did you know?
Extricate is used for the act of freeing someone or something from a tangled situation. Its spelling and meaning comes from Latin extricatus, which combines the prefix ex- (“out of”) with the noun tricae, meaning “trifles or perplexities.” The resemblance of tricae to trick is no illusion—it’s an ancestor.
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