fimbriate
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English
Etymology 1
Borrowed from Latin fimbriātus (“fibrous, fringed”), participial adjective formed on fimbriae (“fibers, threads, fringe”) + -ātus (participial adjective-forming suffix), see -ate (verb-forming suffix).
Pronunciation
Audio (Southern England); “fimbriate” (verb): (file)
Verb
fimbriate (third-person singular simple present fimbriates, present participle fimbriating, simple past and past participle fimbriated)
- (transitive) To fringe; to hem.
- 1639, Thomas Fuller, “Of the Honourable Arms in Scutcheons of Nobilitie Occasioned by Their Service in the Holy Warre”, in The Historie of the Holy Warre, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: […] Thomas Buck, one of the printers to the Universitie of Cambridge [and sold by John Williams, London], →OCLC, book V (A Supplement of the Historie of the Holy Warre), page 271:
- Beſides the divers tricking or dreſſing, as piercing, voiding, fimbriating, ingrailing, couping: And in fanſie and devices there is ſtill a plus ultrá; inſomuch that Croſſes alone as they are variouſly diſguiſed, are enough to diſtinguiſh all the ſeverall families of Gentlemen in England.
Derived terms
- fimbriated (adjective)
- fimbriation
Etymology 2
Learned borrowing from Latin fimbriātus (“fibrous, fringed”) (more at etymology 1), see -ate (adjective-forming suffix).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): (adjective) /ˈfɪm.bɹi.ɪt/, (verb) /ˈfɪm.bɹi.eɪt/
Audio (Southern England); “fimbriate” (adjective): (file)
Adjective
fimbriate (not comparable)
- (biology) Fringed, e.g. where the ends of a petal are split into two or more divisions.
- Synonym: fimbriated
- the fimbriate petals of the pink; the fimbriate end of the Fallopian tube
Latin
Pronunciation
- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): /fim.briˈaː.te/, [fɪmbriˈäːt̪ɛ]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /fim.briˈa.te/, [fimbriˈäːt̪e]
Adjective
fimbriāte
Categories:
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- English terms derived from Latin
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- English lemmas
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- en:Biology
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