Word
Of
The
Day
accentuate
accentuate \ak-SEN-shu-wayt\
verb
To accentuate something is to make it more noticeable.
// He likes to wear clothes that
accentuate his muscular build.
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Examples:
“My mother could make me anything I wanted to be. As a child she transformed me into a swan, a mermaid, a white Persian cat dressed like an elegant Victorian lady with a porkpie hat and a ruffled bustle to
accentuate my tail. She’d trained as a costume designer.” — Perdita Finn,
Mothers of Magic: Summoning the Wisdom of Our Ancestors, 2026
Did you know?
When you accentuate something you put an “accent,” or emphasis, on it.
Stress not about the word’s history; its journey into the English language was very straightforward. It comes from the Latin
accentus, meaning
“accent” (which itself comes in part from
cantus, meaning “song”), and since the early 18th century, its meanings haven’t changed much. The word was initially used as a synonym of the verb
accent to mean “to pronounce with greater stress or force,” which is a small leap from today’s meaning of “to make something more noticeable; to emphasize.” One excellent way to remember not only how to pronounce
accentuate but also its etymological connection to song is the classic (and helpfully titled) tune “Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate the Positive,” by Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer, which has been performed by such luminaries as Dinah Washington, Sam Cooke, and Bing Crosby and the Andrews Sisters.