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Darwinite. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
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English
Etymology
From Darwin + -ite.
Noun
Darwinite (countable and uncountable, plural Darwinites)
- Synonym of Darwinian
- One who believes in Darwinian evolution.
1879, Henry Strickland Constable, Fashions of the Day in Medicine and Science: A Few More Hints:Oh, but, guesses our ingenious Darwinite, in this breed the male birds courted the bright-coloured ones and neglected the others, and thus a bright-coloured race has survived by natural selection.
1890 September 15, C. Carter Blake, “Our Fallen Brethren”, in Lucifer, volume 7, number 37, page 54:The appeal to the unknown and the imaginary is the modus operandi of the modern Darwinite.
2004, Cressida Fforde, Collecting the Dead: Archaeology and the Reburial Issue, page 28:In fact, as was already being demonstrated by German anatomist Carl Vogt, a polygenist and Darwinite, the theory of natural selection could easily be used within a strictly polygenist framework by arguing that the different races had evolved separately from different species of anthropoid apes (Hunt 1866: 339).
- Someone from Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia.
1933, Charles Henry Holmes, We Find Australia, page 68:Our introduction to the amazing wildfowl in the north was at the end of a forty-mile run, due east of Darwin near the Adelaide River, with Jim Ward, a Darwinite, at the wheel of a highpowered car.
1987, Geoffrey Atkinson, Philip Quirk, The Australian adventure:Australia's north pole has a magnetic charm, and like many others, you could become a permanent statistic — something the locals are proud to call a Darwinite.
2014, Tess Lea, Darwin:Life wasn't easy for the Chinese, even if they knew how to be self-sufficient, fourth-generation Darwinite Laurence Ah Toy reminds me.
- A silver-grey arsenide of copper (Cu18As).
1860, D. Forbes, “On Darwinite, a new Mineral Species from Chile”, in Philosophical Magazine, page 423:The name Darwinite has been adopted in honour of Darwin, whose admirable geological examination of this part of South America is so well known as to require no comment.
1866, Report of the Thirty-Fifth Meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science - Volume 35, page 29:The mineral Darwinite was proved identical with a mineral which had been about same time found at Lake Superior, and which had been called Whitneyite.
2008, Bernhard Pracejus, The Ore Minerals Under the Microscope: An Optical Guide, page 92:Algodonite (Whitneyite, Darwinite).
2015, Robert Simmons, Naisha Ahsian, The Book of Stones:Darwinite is a stone of loving relationship.