Word
Of
The
Day
undulate
undulate \UN-juh-layt\
verb
Undulate is a formal word that means “to move or be shaped like waves.”
// On the approach to the tulip festival, visitors are greeted by a large field of the colorful flowers
undulating in the wind.
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Examples:
“When sufficiently heated, the fresh cheese contracts, sweating whey from the curds that provides liquid to cook the dough, which will plump up and
undulate slightly as it expands.” — Karima Moyer-Nocchi,
The Epic History of Macaroni and Cheese: From Ancient Rome to Modern America, 2026
Did you know?
Undulate and
inundate (“to cover something with a flood of water”) are word cousins that flow from
unda, the Latin word for “wave.” No surprise there. But would you have guessed that
abound,
surround, and
redound are also
unda offspring? While their modern definitions have nothing to do with waves or water, at some point in their early histories, they all meant “to overflow,” and caught a wave from there.