Word of the Day
: May 17, 2013litmus test
playWhat It Means
: a test in which a single factor (as an attitude, event, or fact) is decisive
litmus test in Context
For Curtis, the litmus test of good barbeque ribs is whether or not they have that moist fall-off-the-bone quality.
"The students who are following the discussion often look uncomfortable at this point, and the moment serves as a litmus test to see who really is paying attention." - From an article by Dolores T. Puterbaugh in USA Today, November 2012
Did You Know?
It was in the 14th century that scientists discovered that litmus, a mixture of colored organic compounds obtained from lichen, turns red in acid solutions and blue in alkaline solutions and, thus, can be used as an acid-base indicator. Six centuries later, people began using "litmus test" figuratively. It can now refer to any single factor that establishes the true character of something or causes it to be assigned to one category or another. Often it refers to something (such as an opinion about a political or moral issue) that can be used to make a judgment about whether someone or something is acceptable or not.
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What former Word of the Day refers to the physical or social setting in which something occurs or develops? The answer is …
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