Word
Of
The
Day
cordial
cordial \KOR-jul\
adjective
Cordial describes someone or something that is politely pleasant and friendly.
// All the guests were assembled and given a
cordial greeting by the host.
See the entry >
Examples:
“The Burnside post office is a small one-room wooden building profusely planted with flowers all around it. ... One enters a tiny vestibule and pushes a buzzer, which brings Christine out of the house, brushing by you into the ‘office’ proper, where she opens the counter window and, with a smile and a toss of her hair, says, in a
cordial tone, ‘Now, my dear, what can I do for you?’” — Robert Finch,
Summers in Squid Tickle: A Newfoundland Odyssey, 2025
Did you know?
The Latin root
cord- (or
cor) is at the heart of the connection between
cordial,
concord (meaning “harmony”), and
discord (meaning “conflict”).
Cord- means “heart,” and each of these
cord- descendants has something to do with the heart, at least figuratively.
Concord, which comes from
com- (meaning “together” or “with”) plus
-cord, suggests that one heart is with another.
Discord combines the prefix
dis- (meaning “apart”) with
-cord to imply that hearts are apart. Hundreds of years ago,
cordial could mean simply “of or relating to the (literal) heart” (the
-ial is simply an adjective suffix) but today anything described as
cordial—be it a friendly welcome, a compliment, or an agreement—comes from the heart in a figurative sense.
Cordial is also used as a noun to refer to a usually sweet liqueur, the name being inspired by the idea that a cordial invigorates the heart.