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adonise. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
adonise, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
adonise in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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English
Etymology
From Adonis + -ise.
Verb
adonise (third-person singular simple present adonises, present participle adonising, simple past and past participle adonised)
- (transitive) To embellish or adorn, especially in order to improve the appearance of.
1804, Christoph Martin Wieland, Confessions in Elysium: Or, The Adventures of a Platonic, pages 73–74:Delighted with each other......we rambled....arm in arm......about the citron groves;.......and, when a mossy bank invited our repose...my charmer would weave garlands of flowers to adonise her shepherd ; ..........recline upon my arm..... and to the gentle lullaby of a murmuring stream..... sink into forgetfulness
1830, an old army surgeon, Economy of the hands and feet, fingers and toes, page 107:Formerly, if not exactly to the same extent at the present day, mineral substances were only made use of to adonise the complexion ; indeed, every composition is qualified with this name, whether it be white or red, which women, and even men (coxcombs), with a clear skin, subserve to embellish their faces, with a view to imitate the colours of youth, or artificially to repair the absence of them.
2013, Steven Douglas, Lincoln’s Bedsheet, →ISBN:Of all the looming Negroes that Lincoln could have brought into the White House to adonise his cause, Johnson had been his choice, with the scuttling train of a monitor lizard.
- (intransitive) To enhance one's own appearance.
1820, Peter Bayley, Sketches from St. George's Fields, page 122:Leaving a breath to swell his tradesmen's books, To adonise, to smile, and kill with looks;
1859, Mrs. Octavius Freire Owen, Raised to the Peerage: A Novel, page 158:Since I parted with Darnley, who went in to adonise, I believe, Cameron has been hindering me with acknowledgments and regrets.
1891, John Keats (ed Sir Sidney Colvin), Letters of John Keats to His Family and Friends, page 291:Whenever I find myself growing vapourish, I rouse myself, wash, and put on a clean shirt, brush my hair and clothes, tie my shoestrings neatly, and in fact adonise as I were going out.
Usage notes
Originally, this word was often capitalized, perhaps reflecting its origins from a proper noun (Adonis). After about 1850, however, the use of the upper case version gives way to a lower-case version.
Anagrams
French
Pronunciation
Verb
adonise
- inflection of adoniser:
- first/third-person singular present indicative/subjunctive
- second-person singular imperative