passel

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for November 2, 2021 is:

passel • \PASS-ul\  • noun

A passel is a large number or amount of something.

// A passel of work emails awaited Jon on his return from vacation.

See the entry >

Examples:

"'He's here!' the vehicle owners cheered as 100-year old driver of a 102-year-old Buick Irenee DuPont arrived again. DuPont then handily backed his car precisely into a parking place alongside a passel of other old vehicles." — Chris Barber, The Chester County Press (Oxford, Pennsylvania), 22 Sept. 2021

Did you know?

Loss of the sound of "r" after a vowel and before a consonant in the middle of a word is common in spoken English. This linguistic idiosyncrasy has given the language a few new words, including cuss from curse, bust from burst, and passel from parcel.



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