© Copyright Science News
animal
Female rats like a different kind of tickling than males
© Copyright Yahoo Sports
soccer
Amazing to be one game from Championship - Challinor
© Copyright Billboard
music
Maluma & His Girlfriend Are Having a Boy: ‘The Joy’s Very Different from the First Pregnancy’
© Copyright Interesting Engineering
technology
US aerospace firm clears new adaptive engine for Boeing F-47 sixth-gen fighter jet
© Copyright MarketWatch.com
finance
© Copyright MarketWatch.com
finance
© Copyright Car and Drive
auto
© Copyright New York YIMBY
real_estate
© Copyright The Daily Meal
food
© Copyright GameSpot
game

GAME
One Overpowered WoW Class Just Defied Years Of MMO Design, So Of Course Blizzard Nerfed It
       
REAL_ESTATE
Affordable Housing Units Still Available at 1975 Madison Avenue in Harlem, Manhattan
       
FFNEWS
Growing demand from Vietnam attracts CMA CGM Air Cargo
       
AUTO
Fast And Furious Family Is Racing From Movies To Streaming TV
       
CONNECTICUT
An AI future must be a solarpunk future
       
NATION
DOJ asks court to halt Jeffrey Clark disbarment proceedings
       
SHOPPING
G-Shock’s New Holy Grail Radically Transforms an Iconic Watch
       
ART
In ‘Piercing the Veil,’ Marina Kappos Gets to Know the Spectre of Grief
       
ART
Birds Flock Amid Vibrant Blooms in Vasilisa Romanenko’s Acrylic Paintings
       
ODD_FUN
Zoltar fortune telling machine predicts winning Powerball numbers
       
NEW YORK WEATHER
basketball
beauty
connecticut
FFNEWS
finance
how_to
knowledge
long_island
mental
new_jersey
people
science
shopping
soccer
world

Word of the Day

imbroglio

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for May 14, 2026 is:

imbroglio • \im-BROHL-yoh\  • noun

Imbroglio is a formal word that refers to a complex dispute or argument.

// Much of the sisters’ text thread involves the the latest imbroglios on their favorite reality show—who’s mad at who for what, and why.

See the entry >

Examples:

“A tangled web of interpersonal feuds, played out in letters to the local newspaper, in social media posts and via legal filings in county court, has left the town with no clear path out of a situation that’s not covered by state law. The imbroglio has even reached the state Capitol ...” — Seth Klamann and Sam Tabachnik, The Denver Post, 8 Mar. 2026

Did you know?

Ever noticed how an imbroglio embroils people in controversy? There’s a reason for that—an etymological one, anyway. Both the noun imbroglio (referring to, among other things, a scandal or bitter argument) and verb embroil (“to involve in conflicts or difficulties”) come from the Middle French word embrouiller, a combination of the prefix en- and brouiller, meaning “to jumble,” though they took slightly different paths. Embroil’s was direct, passing from Middle French through French and into English around the turn of the 16th century. Italians altered embrouiller to form imbrogliare, meaning “to entangle,” which spawned the noun imbroglio that English speakers embraced in the mid-18th century. English imbroglio first referred to a confused mass, and later expanded to cover confusing social situations such as complicated disputes, misunderstandings, and scandals.



Inside Towa Bird's Rise in Music, New Album | Billboard Women in Music 2026
Sethward Really Rose From the Ashes 🔥 | AGT
PWBA Bowling Tour Championship 08 09 2022
The Best Anti-Aging Advice I Wish I Knew
Jackie and Shadow's eaglets are growing. See how big they are now.
The Bureau Presents Designer Krissy King
Norah Jones - Answering your questions - Live From Home (07/10/20)
Window motor wired backwards & broken handle! Ford Expedition #Ford #automobile #diy #mechanic
WILD EXPERIMENTS TO TRY AT HOME | Crazy Science Experiments | LIVE | Science Max