Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day show

Summary: Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for January 11, 2014 is: toady \TOH-dee\ noun : one who flatters in the hope of gaining favors Examples: The editorial unfairly characterizes the appointee as one of the mayor's toadies, ignoring her long record of unselfish service to the community. "But, Stan and his toady never actually laid a finger on me and the threats ceased as mysteriously and suddenly as they started." — From an article by Mike Tupa in the Bartlesville Examiner-Enterprise (Oklahoma), November 20, 2013 Did you know? We can thank old-time toadeaters for today's word. In 17th-century Europe, a toadeater was a showman's assistant whose job was to make the boss look good. The toadeater would eat (or pretend to eat) what were supposed to be poisonous toads. His or her charlatan master would then "save" the toad-afflicted assistant by expelling the poison. It's little wonder that such assistants became symbolic of extreme subservience, and that "toadeater" became a word for any obsequious underling. By the early 1800s, it had been shortened and altered to "toady," our current term for a servile self-seeker.