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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

Merriam-Webster

Etymology and Origin of Gainsay

From gainsayJun 28, 2026

Excerpt from Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

gainsayJun 28, 2026 — starts at 0:00

It's the Word of the Day podcast for june twenty eighth Granger knows when you're a procurement manager for an office park You're not managing one building, you're managing all of them. And to stay ahead, you need to see through walls and around corners. Light's about to fail, filters ready to clog, H backack on its last leg. If you wait until something breaks, you're already behind Count on Granger for quality products, easy reordering, and twenty four seven support Call one eight hundred Granger, click Granger. com or just stop by. Granger for the ones who get it done Today's word is gain Say, spelled as one word G A I N S A Y can't say is a verb To gains sayay something is to deny or disagree with it, or to show or say that it's not true Gainsay is a formal word usually used in negative statements. Here's the word used in a sentence from the Boston Globe Whatever you think of it, there's no gain saying the fact that the sound of music is a remarkably durable vehicle It's frequently produced and suffered no lasting damage to its reputation from a live NBC performance in twenty thirteen You might have trouble figuring out the meaning of the word gainsay if you're thinking of our modern word gain plus say It should help to know that gain part comes to us from the old English word gain, meaning against or in opposition to The familiar verb gain comes from Anglo French and is unrelated

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