The word for today is…

insouciance (noun) – : lighthearted unconcern

Source : Merriam -Webster

Etymology : Don’t worry – be insouciant. Perhaps your mind will rest easier if we explain that English speakers learned “insouciance” from the French in the 1700s (and the adjective “insouciant” has been part of our language since the 1800s). The French word comes from a combination of the negative prefix in- and soucier, meaning “to trouble or disturb.” “Soucier” in turn traces to “sollicitus,” the Latin word for “anxious.” If it seems to you that “sollicitus” looks a lot like some other English words you’ve seen, you’re right. That root also gave us “solicit” (which now means “to entreat” but which was once used to mean “to fill with concern or anxiety”), “solicitude” (meaning “uneasiness of mind”), and “solicitous” (“showing or expressing concern”).

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David is a retired surgeon originally from London who came to New Zealand twenty-seven years ago after being delayed in Singapore for thirteen years on leaving the UK. He was coerced into studying Latin...