
Alright, dear reader: today’s Word of the Day is spatulate. (ˈspætʃələt or ˈspætʃəˌleɪt if you’re feeling particularly pedantic about your diphthongs), the adjective that sneaks into the language like a spatula sliding under a half-burnt pancake you were too proud to admit was ruined.
It means having a broad, rounded end, shaped like – you guessed it – a spatula, that humble kitchen implement whose very name descends from Latin spatula, diminutive of spatha (a broad flat blade, sword-ish thing), which itself traces back through Greek spathē to something broad and flat enough to whack weave threads or row a trireme or just generally assert dominance over dough. Entered English proper around 1760 via Modern Latin spatulatus, because nothing says “I’m a serious botanist describing a leaf” like borrowing from dead languages to sound like you know what you’re doing.
The word hangs around mostly in botany (spatulate leaves: narrow stalk exploding into a fat rounded tip, like nature got bored of pointy and decided to go full ladle), anatomy, and the occasional descriptive flex when someone’s fingers or features demand more precision than “thick” or “stubby” can deliver. Example straight from the usage canon: “his thick, spatulate fingers.”
But let’s get real, because precision without application is just intellectual foreplay.
There she was, mid-stride across the sticky floorboards, hips swinging with the slow, inevitable authority of tectonic plates deciding to fuck shit up, her lower half a masterpiece of broad, rounded geometry that made every barstool occupant briefly forget how to blink. Not heart-shaped, not apple-bottomed, not any of those coy euphemisms people trot out when they’re afraid of the truth: no, hers was a spatulate ass – broad at the business end, tapering just enough upstream to suggest engineering rather than accident, the kind of posterior that could flip an omelet from across the room.
She caught the stare of one poor bastard nursing a warm IPA and a grudge against optimism. He froze, glass halfway to lips, eyes locked on the impossible physics of it all, the way the denim strained and surrendered in equal measure, the rounded flare catching the low neon like a signal flare from some distant, more honest civilization. He tried to look away – failed spectacularly – then tried again, this time with the doomed concentration of a man attempting to defuse his own libido using only willpower and bad posture. The ass didn’t care. It just kept moving, broad and rounded and utterly indifferent to the wreckage it left behind: one spilled drink, two dropped jaws, and a suddenly very expensive tab because nobody could remember how to signal for the check.
She reached the door, paused – perhaps sensing the atmospheric pressure drop – then pushed through into the night, leaving behind the faint scent of vanilla body spray and the lingering echo of collective male failure. The bar exhaled. Someone muttered “Jesus,” though it wasn’t clear if it was prayer or curse. The jukebox clicked to the next track, something with too much reverb and not enough mercy.
Use spatulate today. Deploy it like a weapon. Let it sit there on the page, fat and rounded and refusing to apologize. Because language, like anatomy, is better when it’s shameless.
N.P.: “Protocol Flow” – Metal Scar Radio, Hybrid













