Word of the Day

: June 27, 2012

oftentimes

play
adverb AW-fun-tymez

What It Means

: often, repeatedly

oftentimes in Context

Oftentimes, she is the last employee to leave the office for the day.

"For the past three months, viewers have borne witness to what has become a winning formula in reality TV: loudmouthed, oftentimes obnoxious people bickering with one another." - From a recap of Celebrity Apprentice by Dan Hyman on RollingStone.com, May 21, 2012


Did You Know?

Despite its archaic, literary ring, "oftentimes" is quite alive today. In fact, it seems to be more popular even now than it was thirty years or so ago, appearing frequently both in written expressions and in quoted speech. "Oftentimes" was first used in the 14th century (the same century that gave us "often"), and its meaning hasn't changed - as meanings oftentimes will - in all that time. It was formed as an extension of its slightly older synonym "ofttimes." Today "ofttimes" is less common, but "oft" (which comes from Old English and also means "often" or "frequently") is popular in combination with past participles, as in "oft-praised."



Test Your Memory

What recent Word of the Day originated as the title of a 1961 novel by Joseph Heller? The answer is ...


Podcast


More Words of the Day

Love words? Need even more definitions?

Subscribe to America's largest dictionary and get thousands more definitions and advanced search—ad free!