© Copyright MarketWatch.com
finance
Oil prices fall, stock futures climb on reports U.S. has proposed a cease-fire to Iran
© Copyright Timeout.com
metro
People are obsessed with this cafe in L.A. and, now, it's open in NYC
© Copyright Billboard
music
BTS Hit a Home Run With ‘ARIRANG’ & Now They’re Soundtracking MLB’s Opening Week With New Hype Videos
© Copyright upi.com
nation
NASA announces accelerated plan to build moon base, skip lunar space station

WELLNESS
Why You Have Sleep Issues if You’re a Woman in Your Late 30s
       
ODD_FUN
Look: Firefighters rescue dog from deep cave in Kentucky
       
ODD_FUN
Watch: Circus performer pulls 2,184-pound carriage with his nipples
       
HOW_TO
Make Your iPhone Easier to Use When You Need It, and Harder When You Don't
       
WELLNESS
Cutting Back on Sweets Doesn't Curb Sugar Cravings. Here's What Does
       
BOOK
While We’re Here
       
BOOK
Western Star
       
HEALTH
GLP-1 Drugs Like Ozempic, Wegovy May Help Treat Anxiety, Depression
       
NEW_JERSEY
NJ Spotlight News: March 23, 2026
       
FASHION
Influencer claims Disney World staff shamed her ‘short, form-fitting outfit’ after visitor complaints
       
NEW YORK WEATHER
art
auto
book
entertainment
exercise
game
golf
health
how_to
nation
people
politics
science
sports
travel

Word of the Day

cadence

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 24, 2026 is:

cadence • \KAY-dunss\  • noun

Cadence is used to refer to various rhythmic or repeated motions, activities, or patterns of sound, or to the way a person's voice changes by gently rising and falling while they are speaking.

// Ivy relaxed at the beach, listening to the cadence of the surf.

// He speaks with a soft Southern cadence.

See the entry >

Examples:

“Urged by a fast-talking auctioneer and his familiar cadence, paddles shot up as bids climbed into the four- and five-figure range.” — Lily Moayeri, Rolling Stone, 29 Jan. 2026

Did you know?

A cadence is a rhythm, or a flow of words or music, in a sequence that is regular (or steady as it were). But lest we be mistaken, cadence also lends its meaning to the sounds of Mother Nature (such as birdsong) to be sure. Cadence comes from Middle English borrowed from Medieval Latin’s own cadentia, a lovely word that means “rhythm in verse.” (You may also recognize a cadence cousin, sweet cadenza, as a word that is familiar in the opera universe.) And from there our cadence traces just a little further backward to the Latin verb cadere “to sound rhythmically, to fall.” Praise the rising and the falling of the lilting in our language, whether singing songs or rhyming or opining on it all.



"Big Night" for amphibians and the humans who protect them #wildlife #science #animals #salamander
Motorized Pole Climber! 🤯
On this day in 2001 Queen were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame! 🎤🎸 #queen
Can You Really Just WALK OFF a BLOOD SUGAR SPIKE?
New York City LIVE Manhattan on Tuesday (March 24, 2026)
Avoid The Overpriced Italian Restaurant Chains At All Costs
NJ gets new U.S. attorney following Habba controversy
China’s Coldest Major City — Harbin Explained
BENEFICIARZ: BLACHARZ WZIĄŁ MOJE AUTO NA WARSZTAT.