© Copyright Yahoo Sports
soccer
Report: Fulham told to pay £35m to sign 10-goal striker
© Copyright CT Mirror
connecticut
CT to get $154M through federal rural health grant for 2026
© Copyright NEWS10 ABC
upstate
Popular ice fishing spots in the Capital Region
© Copyright upi.com
nation
FBI foils terror plot targeting North Carolina grocery store, restaurant
© Copyright LIVE SCIENCE
science
© Copyright Timeout.com
metro
© Copyright Interesting Engineering
technology
© Copyright NEWS10 ABC
upstate
© Copyright NY Post
real_estate
© Copyright CT Mirror
connecticut

GAME
The Magic Of Peak Is Its Lost-like Lore
       
BASKETBALL
NBA odds, picks, best bets for Friday, Jan. 2, from proven model: This 3-leg parlay returns over +600
       
SCIENCE
Yellowstone quiz: How much do you know about the first national park?
       
FFNEWS
Brake Check: An Industry Wake-Up Call on FreightWaves
       
SHOPPING
Ducati’s Next-Generation Motorcycle Project Heralds a New Kind of Speed
       
WORLD
Iran protests widen as Trump and Iranian officials exchange threats
       
LONG_ISLAND
Alleged CVS Christmas killer hit with first-degree murder indictment
       
ART
Lawrence Weiner at Manual Arts
       
HOW_TO
I Found the Only Fix for Scam Calls That Actually Works
       
FFNEWS
GDP grew 4.3% in Q3, and it was ‘healthier’ growth
       
NEW YORK WEATHER
auto
basketball
beauty
connecticut
entertainment
finance
game
knowledge
metro
nation
odd_fun
science
sports
technology
upstate

Word of the Day

febrile

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for January 2, 2026 is:

febrile • \FEB-ryle\  • adjective

Febrile is a medical term meaning "marked or caused by fever; feverish." It is sometimes used figuratively, as in "a febrile political climate."

// I'm finally back on my feet after recovering from a febrile illness.

// The actor delivered the monologue with a febrile intensity.

See the entry >

Examples:

"Peppered with exclamation marks, breathless and febrile, this is an utterly mesmeric account of how one man's crimes can affect an entire community." — Laura Wilson, The Guardian (London), 20 June 2025

Did you know?

The English language has had the word fever for as long as the language has existed (that is, about a thousand years); the related adjective feverish has been around since the 14th century. But that didn’t stop the 17th-century medical reformer Noah Biggs from admonishing physicians to care for their "febrile patients" properly. Biggs apparently thought his medical writing required a word that clearly nodded to a Latin heritage, and called upon the Latin adjective febrilis, from febris, meaning "fever." It’s a tradition that English has long kept: look to Latin for words that sound technical or elevated. But fever too comes from febris. It first appeared (albeit with a different spelling) in an Old English translation of a book about the medicinal qualities of various plants. By Biggs’s time it had shed all obvious hallmarks of its Latin ancestry. Febrile, meanwhile, continues to be used in medicine in a variety of ways, including in references to such things as "febrile seizures" and "the febrile phase" of an illness. The word has also developed figurative applications matching those of feverish, as in "a febrile atmosphere."



NBC New York Morning News: 1/2/2026
Brasília, this was a special reunion! Did you miss us? #gunsnroses
A Homemade Monster Motorbike! 🤩 #giant #motorbike #homemade
Overnight Blueberry Oats
Return - A 4 Part Journey - 2026!
Paul Feig on What It Would Take to FINALLY Get a BRIDESMAIDS Sequel (Exclusive)
V 'TYPE 非' Concept Preview 2
When Did Life Get This Complicated?
100 COOL TOOLS THAT GO TO THE NEXT LEVEL