© Copyright upi.com
nation
DOE moves civil rights to Justice Department and disabilities to HHS
© Copyright MarketWatch.com
finance
SpaceX trading hits ‘bonkers’ levels as new ETFs see a massive cash influx
© Copyright Interesting Engineering
technology
Eno humanoid robot aims to become the general-purpose machine for every workplace
© Copyright New York Post
opinion
Cornell student who ‘won’t work for Jews’ is a symptom of a far darker hatred that must be stopped
© Copyright NEWS10 ABC
upstate
© Copyright upi.com
nation
© Copyright Gear Patrol
shopping
© Copyright Gear Patrol
shopping
© Copyright Car and Drive
auto
© Copyright GameSpot
game

OPINION
Today’s greatest threat to academic freedom is . . . academia
       
LIFESTYLE
All the most-streamed shows of 2026 (so far) — how many have you watched?
       
ODD_FUN
Lottery player's forgetfulness leads to $1.05M jackpot
       
ODD_FUN
Look: Loose emu's origins a mystery in New Jersey
       
SCIENCE
Wreck of World War II Japanese 'hellship' that sank with more than 1,000 Allied POWs on board discovered off the Philippines
       
BASKETBALL
What's next for LeBron James? Re-setting the odds for his next team, plus why retirement seems less likely now
       
FFNEWS
Rhenus appoints Dudley to lead air and ocean in the UK
       
TRAVEL
Lost in Translation, Found in Tokyo
       
NEW_JERSEY
Op-Ed: NJ has a housing shortage. Sherrill is working to fix it
       
HEALTH
How Ultra-Processed Foods Are Made Matters as Much as What's in Them
       
NEW YORK WEATHER
animal
art
auto
connecticut
fashion
finance
food
football
game
long_island
opinion
retirement
soccer
sports
world

Word of the Day

gamut

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for June 16, 2026 is:

gamut • \GAM-ut\  • noun

A gamut is a range or series of related things. When we say that something “runs the gamut,” we are saying that it encompasses an entire range of related things.

// The flea market offerings run the gamut with a wide array of vendors each offering something unique.

See the entry >

Examples:

“... she brings a certain je ne sais quoi to the production with themes running the gamut from circuses and rodeos to mermaids and pirates.” — Heather Douglas, Coast Weekend (Astoria, Oregon), 23 Apr. 2026

Did you know?

With the song “Do-Re-Mi,” the 1965 musical film The Sound of Music (adapted from the 1958 stage musical by Rodgers and Hammerstein) introduced millions of non-musicians to solfège, the singing of the sol-fa syllablesdo, re, mi, fa, sol, la, ti—to teach the tones of a musical scale. Centuries earlier, however, the do in “Do-Re-Mi” was known as ut. Indeed, the first note on the scale of Guido d’Arezzo, an 11th century musician and monk who had his own way of applying syllables to musical tones, was ut. d’Arezzo also called the first line of his bass staff gamma, which meant that gamma-ut was the term for a note written on the first staff line. In time, gamma-ut underwent a shortening to gamut, and later its meaning expanded first to cover all the notes of d’Arezzo’s scale, then to cover all the notes in the range of an instrument, and, eventually, to cover an entire range of any sort.



CBS Evening News Full Broadcast | June 15, 2026
Every Year After Cast REACTS to Season 1 Finale: Their Wishes for Season 2! (Exclusive)
Long Island Summer 30 sec
Top 5 Queen songs that need to be on your Pride Playlists 🌈 #pride
SMART GADGETS THAT WILL UPGRADE YOUR LIFE!
She's Like The Wind 🌬️ – Patrick Swayze / Guitar Chords / MusikMan
Putting Tiny Tires On Big Rims... 😳
Aerial Video of Upstate New York !
26 years of Adam Scott's swing 🏌️‍♂️