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Ripped from the Headlines: June 2025: June Vocabulary Words

It's June! This is the month to celebrate Flag Day, Juneteenth, and Father's Day — and it's also the month during which we mark the longest day of the year.
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Full list of words from this list:

  1. assassination
    murder of a public figure by surprise attack
    On June 28, 1914, Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated. He was the heir apparent to the throne of Austria-Hungary — in other words, the next person in line to be king. According to most historians, Ferdinand's assassination was one of the major causes of World War I. After Serbian Gavrilo Princip shot Ferdinand, Austria-Hungary declared war against Serbia, setting the war in motion.
  2. asteroid
    a small celestial body composed of rock and metal
    "when the air burst of a small near-Earth asteroid" - sounds off
    National Asteroid Day is observed every year on June 30, the anniversary of 1908's Tunguska Event, when a small near-Earth asteroid flattened 80 million trees in Siberia. This international day of education and awareness began as a way to share information about these sun-orbiting space rocks. Asteroid comes from a Greek root, aster, or "star."
  3. astronaut
    a person trained to travel in a spacecraft
    Astronaut and physicist Sally Ride became the first American woman in space on June 18, 1983. Ride was a member of the Challenger space shuttle crew, part of a mission to test a satellite and deploy new ones. The following year, Ride returned to space for a second time. During the two missions, she spent a total of 343 hours outside Earth's atmosphere. Astronaut has Greek roots meaning "star" and "sailor."
  4. Big Brother
    an authoritarian leader and invader of privacy
    June 25, 1903, is the birthday of Eric Arthur Blair, who is best known by his pen name, George Orwell. He is the author of the dystopian classics Animal Farm and 1984. The latter gave us the term Big Brother, commonly used for an authoritarian ruler who watches individuals closely. You can also thank Orwell for doublethink, memory hole, and prole — not to mention Orwellian.
  5. correspondent
    someone who communicates by means of letters
    Letter writers love the 1st of June, because it's National Pen Pal Day. This holiday was made for correspondents who like to keep in touch with friends by sending notes back and forth in the mail. The word correspondent comes from the medieval Latin correspondentem, "reciprocate or harmonize."
  6. demonstration
    a public display of group feelings
    Pro-democracy demonstrations in Beijing, China's Tiananmen Square came to a violent end on June 4, 1989. Chinese troops shot at protesters who tried to block the military's advance into the square, killing hundreds — or possibly thousands — of the demonstrators. The event is referred to by China's government as the June Fourth Incident, and as the Tiananmen Square Massacre by much of the rest of the world.
  7. emancipation
    freeing someone from the control of another
    Juneteenth goes by many names, including Freedom Day, Liberation Day, and Emancipation Day. This holiday falls on June 19, commemorating the end of slavery in the United States and marking the day that the last enslaved people finally learned that they were free. In 1865, two years after the Emancipation Proclamation, enslaved Americans in Galveston, Texas, were liberated. Emancipation has a root meaning "deliver from ownership."
  8. flag
    a rectangular piece of cloth of distinctive design
    June 14 is Flag Day, commemorating the day in 1777 when the U.S. officially adopted the American flag. The 13 red and white stripes represent the original 13 colonies that declared independence from Britain, and the stars — initially 13, and today 50 — symbolize the states. An act of Congress in 1949 established Flag Day, and while not an official federal holiday, it's celebrated with parades and flags displayed on homes, businesses, and government buildings.
  9. folklore
    the unwritten stories and proverbs and songs of a culture
    Paul Bunyan, the larger-than-life lumberjack hero of North American folklore, is honored every year on June 28. It's traditionally a day for telling tall tales about the mythical character and his sidekick, Babe the Blue Ox. Paul Bunyan started as the fictional subject of stories told aloud by loggers in the U.S. and Canada, most of them focusing on his superhuman abilities and extraordinary strength.
  10. interrogation
    formal systematic questioning
    The U.S. Supreme Court handed down its decision in Miranda v. Arizona on June 13, 1966. This landmark ruling states that criminal suspects have to be informed of their right to an attorney and against self-incrimination before a police interrogation. If officers interrogate a suspect without first reading those rights, none of the information they gain can be used in court. A majority of the justices found that the Constitution's Fifth Amendment guarantees this right.
  11. invasion
    the act of marching aggressively into another's territory
    On June 6, 1944, the Allied invasion of Normandy began, launching a nearly three-month-long battle that led to the end of World War II. The Normandy landings, often referred to as D-Day, were part of the largest naval invasion in history. Almost 1,600 Allied troops crossed the English Channel to land on five beaches in Normandy, France. The Latin root of invasion means "enter violently."
  12. paternal
    characteristic of a father
    The third Sunday of June is Father's Day, an occasion meant for celebrating paternal love with your dad or father figure. Mother's Day was designated as a U.S. federal holiday in 1914, but it took dads 58 years to catch up! Father's Day became official in 1972, by order of President Richard Nixon. Paternal shares a root with father — the Latin pater.
  13. pride
    a feeling of self-respect and personal worth
    For more than 50 years, June has been recognized as Pride Month. Worldwide events — including parades, political marches, and festivals — take place all month long in celebration of LGBTQ+ people. Pride is observed in June as a commemoration of the Stonewall Riots on June 28, 1969.
  14. refugee
    an exile who flees for safety
    World Refugee Day was created in 2001 by the United Nations, and it continues to be observed annually on June 20. The day is an opportunity to celebrate the bravery of people who have fled danger in their home countries and rebuilt their lives in new places. Refugee derives from the French refugier, "to take shelter or protect."
  15. solstice
    when the sun is at its greatest distance from the equator
    The summer solstice, which falls on June 20 , 21, or 22 in the northern hemisphere, is known as the longest day of the year. To be precise, the earth's North Pole is at its greatest tilt toward the sun on the solstice, resulting in the maximum amount of daylight. Solstice comes from the Latin solstitium, "point at which the sun seems to stand still," from sol, or "sun."
Created on Tue May 11 10:09:06 EDT 2021 (updated Thu Jun 19 19:59:32 EDT 2025)

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