© Copyright New York Post
metro
Only murders in the building: Teen squatters got past lax security to kill NY mom: lawsuit
© Copyright Yahoo Sports
soccer
Italian Media Claim ‘Napoli Or Milan Will Win The Scudetto If Inter Milan Give In To Fear’ Ahead Of Crucial Two Months
© Copyright New York Post
metro
See it: NYPD Aviation Unit lands on ship, rescues man at sea
© Copyright LIVE SCIENCE
science
'That's why there's 9 billion of us and not 9 billion of some other primate': Why our ability to adapt is humanity's 'superpower'
© Copyright LIVE SCIENCE
science
© Copyright Interesting Engineering
technology
© Copyright Hello! Magazine
lifestyle
© Copyright Billboard
music
© Copyright United Press International, Inc.
world
© Copyright Contemporary Art Daily
art

LONG_ISLAND
Scenes from Hofstra’s first March Madness appearance in 25 years
       
BASKETBALL
Thunder won't visit White House during Washington D.C. trip, cite 'timing issue'
       
GAME
Baffling Crimson Desert Images Have Ignited A Generative AI Controversy
       
SHOPPING
Porsche’s Luxury SUV Just Proved Why It’s Secretly a Great Off-Roader
       
BASKETBALL
Today's top games to watch, best bets, odds: Hawks look to stay hot, Blazers at Timberwolves, NHL and more
       
AUTO
View Exterior Photos of the 2026 Nissan Sentra SR
       
ANIMAL
Mosquitoes get the ‘I’m full’ signal from their butts, not their brains
       
TRAVEL
8 of the best walks in London
       
NEW_JERSEY
NJ Desis take action against ICE raids
       
NEW_JERSEY
Congress moves to protect use of toxic bullets, fishing gear
       
NEW YORK WEATHER
basketball
FFNEWS
finance
golf
how_to
lifestyle
long_island
music
new_jersey
nutrition
opinion
shopping
soccer
wellness
world

Word of the Day

scrutinize

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 21, 2026 is:

scrutinize • \SKROO-tuh-nyze\  • verb

To scrutinize something is to examine it carefully especially in a critical way.

// I closely scrutinized my opponent's moves before making my own.

See the entry >

Examples:

"The governor proposes a balanced budget, and the General Assembly scrutinizes every line." — J.B. Jennings, The Baltimore Sun, 5 Feb. 2026

Did you know?

Scrutinize the history of scrutinize far back enough and you wind up sifting through trash: the word comes from Latin scrutari, which means "to search, to examine," and scrutari likely comes from scruta, meaning "trash." The etymology evokes one who searches through trash for anything of value. The noun scrutiny preceded scrutinize in English, and in its earliest 15th century use referred to a formal vote, and later to an official examination of votes. Scrutinize was established in the 17th century with its familiar "to examine closely" meaning, but retained reference to voting with the specific meaning "to examine votes" at least into the 18th century. (Votes are still commonly said to be scrutinized in the general sense of the word.) And while the term scrutineer can be a general term referring to someone who examines something, it is also sometimes used in British English specifically as a term for someone who takes or counts votes.



NBA highlights: Knicks 93, Nets 92
"To be a strong man, is a vulnerable man" - Patrick Dempsey #menshealth
Thousands Of Marines Heading To The Middle East, USPS Running Out Of Money - The Hill | NEWSNATION
Developers are forced to use AI
Suno's CEO Clarifies If He Thinks AI Will Take People's Jobs #Shorts
Best Animal Videos 2024 😂 - Funniest Dogs 🐶 And Cats 😺 Moments
Joseph Duggar Arrest: Cousin Amy Blames Alleged Child Sex Abuse on 'Toxic Family Cycle' (Exclusiv…
March Madness but make it cute! 16 baby animals compete for your vote
Karma Chameleon 🦎 (Short Version) - Culture Club / Guitar Cover / MusikMan