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behemoth

Author
Merriam-Webster
Published
Sat 09 Aug 2025
Episode Link
https://www.merriam-webster.com/word-of-the-day/behemoth-2025-08-09

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for August 9, 2025 is: behemoth \bih-HEE-muth\ noun
A behemoth is something of monstrous size, power, or appearance. Behemoth (usually capitalized) is also the name of a mighty animal described in the biblical book of Job.

// The town will be voting on whether or not to let the retail behemoth build a store on the proposed site.

[See the entry >](https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/behemoth)

Examples:

"The author ... recounts how his grandfather turned a family spinach farm into an industrial behemoth, and exposes the greed and malfeasance behind the prosperous facade." — The New York Times, 6 July 2025

Did you know?

In the biblical book of Job, Behemoth is the name of a powerful grass-eating, river-dwelling beast with bones likened to bronze pipes and limbs likened to iron bars. Scholars have speculated that the biblical creature was inspired by the [hippopotamus](https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/hippopotamus), but details about the creature’s exact nature are vague. The word first passed from the Hebrew word bĕhēmōth into Late Latin (the Latin used by writers in the third to sixth centuries), where, according to 15th century English poet and monk [John Lydgate](https://www.britannica.com/biography/John-Lydgate) it referred to "a beast rude full of cursednesse." In modern English, behemoth functions as an evocative term for something of monstrous size, power, or appearance.

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