Word
Of
The
Day
sacrosanct
sacrosanct \SAK-roh-sankt\
adjective
Sacrosanct is a formal word that describes something too important and respected to be changed or criticized. It can also mean "most sacred or holy."
// While the family's new matriarch aimed to maintain the familiar traditions of the holidays, she did not consider the details of their celebration to be
sacrosanct.
See the entry >
Examples:
"Sen. Paul Strommen of Sidney ... said there's no appetite among senators to empty the Veterans Aid Fund. 'There's certain things that are kind of
sacrosanct, and veterans' aid is one of those things.'" — Todd von Kampen,
The North Platte (Nebraska) Telegraph, 7 Mar. 2026
Did you know?
Contrary to the beliefs of some, language is not sacrosanct; rather, it is subject to constant modification based on the needs, experiences, and even whims of those who use it. Take the word
sacrosanct itself, which likely comes from the Latin phrase
sacro sanctus meaning "made holy by a sacred rite." There's a definite semantic softening from that to the "too important and respected to be changed or criticized" meaning of
sacrosanct. But holy moly, has
sanctus led to a whole bunch of other English words with a truly pious flavor, from
saint and
sanctimony to
sanctify and
sanctuary.
Sacrum ("a sacred rite"), source of the
sacro in
sacro sanctus, is no slouch either, living on in English anatomy as the name for our pelvic vertebrae—a shortening of
os sacrum, which translates literally as "holy bone."