Word
Of
The
Day
catercorner
catercorner \KAT-ee-kor-ner\
adverb or adjective
Catercorner is used to describe two things that are located across from each other on opposite corners. It is a less common variant of
kitty-corner.
// The store is
catercorner from the park, making it the perfect location to grab snacks for our picnic.
See the entry >
Examples:
“Positioned on balconies
catercorner from each other, Tom Brady completed a pass across Bourbon Street to Rob Gronkowski, proving they’ve still got it. Gronk promptly spiked the football on the fan-filled street below.” — Rebecca Cohen and Greg Rosenstein,
NBC News, 9 Feb. 2025
Did you know?
Catercorner gets its first element from the Middle French noun
quatre, meaning “four,” which English speakers modified to
cater and applied to the four-dotted side of a die—a side important in several winning combinations in dice games. Perhaps because the four spots on a die can suggest an X,
cater eventually came to be used dialectically as a verb meaning “to place, move, or cut across diagonally”;
cater was later combined with
corner to form
catercorner to describe things positioned diagonally from each other. (In one early usage from an 1825 magazine article, the author marvels at an “ancient Roman fresco painting, in which a luxurious table is represented as groaning under (among other choice dishes …) four peacocks, with their tails set, cater-corner!”) Eventually the variants
kitty-corner and
catty-corner, which are now the more common forms, developed. Despite all appearances, these terms bear no etymological relation to our feline friends.