Word
Of
The
Day
vernal
vernal \VER-nul\
adjective
Vernal is a formal adjective that describes something that relates to or occurs in the spring.
// It is such a relief after a long, cold winter to see the trees and flowers in their glorious
vernal bloom.
See the entry >
Examples:
“I visited the wetland as best I could, given my professional obligations and
peripatetic lifestyle, which often nurtured anything but stillness. Still, I baked and sweated in the summer sun, drew a thick down jacket around me on cold and snowy winter days, huddled in
vernal rain, lounged in fall light.” — Christopher Norment,
Terrain.org, 18 Sept. 2024
Did you know?
“The sun’s coming soon. / A future, then, of warmth and runoff, / and old faces surprised to see us. / A
cache of love, I’d call it, / opened up, vernal, refreshed.” These are the closing lines of the poem “
Runoff” by Sidney Burris, and even if you don’t (yet) know the word
vernal, you can probably divine its meaning from context. The sun’s arrival? Melting snow and ice? Optimism? It all sure sounds like spring, the muse of many a poet and the essence of
vernal, an adjective that describes all things related to the season. While the sun has been crossing the
equator since time immemorial, producing a vernal
equinox in the northern hemisphere in late March and in the southern hemisphere in late September, the word
vernal has only been in use in English since the early 16th century, when it blossomed from the Latin adjective
vernālis. That word in turn traces back to the noun
vēr, meaning “spring.”