© Copyright Yahoo Sports
soccer
Davies in 'best ever' Canada squad for World Cup
© Copyright PCWorld
technology
Här får du svar på dina frågor om nyheter – med AI
© Copyright New York Post
metro
Sick new TikTok challenge sends kids to hospital for Benadryl overdose
© Copyright New York Post
metro
Delaney Hall anti-ICE clashes continue – despite New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill’s ‘peaceful’ protest zone

SHOPPING
The Most Unlikely Style Icon Inspired This Perfect Summer Sneaker
       
CONNECTICUT
First housing projects OK’d through CT development authority
       
LONG_ISLAND
Neighbors raise $210K for family of 12-year-old Sag Harbor student
       
GAME
See How 007 First Light’s Iconic Outfits Compare To The James Bond Movies
       
AUTO
Reset a Check Engine Light at Your Own Risk
       
LONG_ISLAND
Nassau police official, judge and Nelson DeMille research partner John G. Kennedy dies
       
ENTERTAINMENT
Star Sightings: Olivia Rodrigo Wears a 'Saturday Night Live' Jacket, Emily Ratajkowski Shops in New York City
       
REAL_ESTATE
303 East 44th Street Tops Out In Midtown East, Manhattan
       
FFNEWS
7Air grows senior leadership team
       
TRAVEL
Your guide to the hugely fun Pink Soup Fest in Vilnius
       
NEW YORK WEATHER
basketball
book
entertainment
exercise
food
game
golf
how_to
knowledge
long_island
metro
new_jersey
people
politics
retirement

Word of the Day

unctuous

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for May 30, 2026 is:

unctuous • \UNK-chuh-wus\  • adjective

Unctuous is a word that’s undergone change in recent years. It now often describes food that is fatty and oily, especially in a pleasing way. Formerly it was more typically applied as a formal adjective describing someone who is figuratively oily—that is, overly or insincerely flattering. Both uses can be found today.

// Braising chicken thighs with their skins on creates a rich, unctuous sauce that can be spooned back over the finished dish.

// The mayor’s unctuous assistant was making the rounds at the fundraiser, chatting up those known to have the biggest bank accounts.

See the entry >

Examples:

“The thinly sliced pork belly is shaved into curlicues and cooks up super quickly and crisply, so it’s great for an impatient group or as a first round. Thick slices are more akin to what you’d find at Korean BBQ restaurants nowadays; they’ll cook and sizzle in their own fat … resulting in juicy, unctuous bites.” — Irene Yoo, Soju Party: How to Drink (and Eat!) Like a Korean, 2025

Did you know?

Unctuous is a slippery word in multiple ways. Its ultimate source is a Latin word meaning “to anoint; to smear or rub with oil or an oily substance,” and this oily character was key to the word’s meaning when it first appeared in the 14th century, as when John Trevisa wrote “Þe fruit of olyue is ful of liȝt, likynge, and vnctuous” (in modern English: “the olive fruit is bright, delicious, and unctuous”). Unctuous here means “fatty” or “oily,” as did its immediate Medieval Latin predecessor unctuosus. This same use of unctuous is quite prominent today, as the word often describes deliciously fatty foods and the sensation of such foods on the palate (as in “an unctuous mouthfeel”). But come across unctuous in literature of the 19th or 20th century and you’re more likely to see a less pleasant application, with the word describing a person or behavior that is figuratively oily—that is, overly or insincerely flattering.



Norah Jones - Say Goodbye - Live at Home
Overachieving Millennials Raise Your Hand
7th Commandment: Do Not Commit Adultery
Calabasas Confidential Cast on NEPO BABY Misconceptions and Forging Their Own Paths (Exclusive)
LIVE from Ho Chi Minh City - Let's Explore Thao Dien
Is less actually more when it comes to building muscle? #healthline #healthyhabits #weightloss
The Doobie Brothers - Takin' It to The Streets (Live at The Cow Palace, Daly City, 1976)
Belmont Cameli's nickname for Stephen Kalyn #menshealth
Most Advanced City in the World? | Shenzhen China