ancestral

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English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Anglo-Norman ancestrel, from ancestre (ancestor).

Pronunciation

  • (US) IPA(key): /ænˈsɛs.təɹ.əl/, /ænˈsɛs.tɹəl/
  • Audio (Southern England):(file)

Adjective

ancestral (not comparable)

  1. Of, pertaining to, derived from, or possessed by, an ancestor or ancestors
    an ancestral estate
    one’s ancestral home

Derived terms

Translations

Noun

ancestral (plural ancestrals)

  1. An ancestor or forbear.
    • 1955, Harry Chandler Elliott, Reprieve from Paradise, page 147:
      Some big cheese bein' grought back to his native island to get planted with his ancestrals.
    • 2006, Scott Dikkers, Peter Hilleren, Destined for Destiny, page 23:
      I thought of the strange two-dimensional world these forebearing ancestrals had to live in.
    • 2007, Michael R. Ott, The Future of Religion: Toward a Reconciled Society, page 145:
      Moreover, the superior ancestrals associated with Plymouth Rock (the Pilgrim Fathers) and Mt. Rushmore (four U.S. presidents) function in the same way as premodern superior ancestrals the world over: as superhuman beings, they preserve and maintain the nation. However, unlike superior ancestrals in pre-modern societies, these ancestors do not evolve out of an actual kin group, and therefore one does not have to be a lineal descendant to approach them.
  2. (India, law) A descendant of one's ancestors.
    • 1868, The Punjab Record - Volume 3, page 58:
      He considered that the local custom permitted a sister's son to inherit in default of near male ancestrals.
    • 1921, Jagannath Raghunath Gharpure, Principles of Hindu Law, page 390:
      But ancestrals cannot be willed away .
    • 1946, Sino-Indian Studies - Volume 2, Part 1, page 19:
      Having no regards for their ancestrals and parents.
  3. An elderly relative.
    • 2018, R. C. Jette, The Elfdins and the Gold Temple: An Oralee Chronicle:
      Cadwy and some of the ancestrals carried Gilbert back to the platform to have his wounds healed by Guinevere.
  4. (biology) A genetic precursor.
    • 1987, Human Biology - Volume 59, Issues 1-3 - 4, page 44:
      The intermediate nature of the gene frequencies of the populations in the two groupings to those of the putative ancestrals, Table 4, indicates the Mestizo gentic constitution of the MMA populations and supports previous information for this area (Garza-Chapa 1983b)
    • 1993, Jorge Enrique Autrique, Molecular Markers Applied to Wheat Improvement, page 33:
      All the ancestrals with unknown origin or pedigree were included within this group.
    • 2023, Gary Paul Nabhan, David Suro Piñera, Agave Spirits: The Past, Present, and Future of Mezcals:
      Some of the tequila ancestrals and añejos have a subdominant odor to them — the smoky, vanilla-like syringaldehyde that is also in coastal raicillas and bacanoras .
  5. A forerunner; One who was involved in an earlier version of something.
    • 1996, Victor Davis Hanson, Fields Without Dreams: Defending the Agrarian Idea, page 25:
      It is hard, remember, to match the craft and proficiency of the ancestrals' bare-bones protocols of turning grapes into raisins, of mastering heat, dirt, and moisture to produce a natural and inexpensive candy.
    • 2015, Allan Hayes, John Blom, Carol Hayes, Southwestern Pottery: Anasazi to Zuni:
      Ancestrals were planters and irrigators, but more cosmopolitan.
    • 2017, Jerry Thompson, Eddie Muller, Oakland Noir:
      I did what any eighties East Coast nerdy writer would do: I called on the ancestrals and they guided me. I asked Dorothy Lazard, Judy Juanita, and Keenan Norris for stories, and they asnwered that call without hesitation, as did new writers like Mahmud Rahman and Keri Miki-Lani Schroeder.
  6. An earlier version of something.
    • 1978, Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria - Volume 90, page 75:
      The old ancestrals of the Murray were disrupted and caused to flow along the Gulpa Creek at the toe of the fault escarpment to Deniliquin (Pels 1966). Later the younger ancestrals followed the old for a short distance beyond Tocumwal, left them and formed the Bullatale Creek flood plain.
    • 2013, Suzanne Bakker, Health Information Management: What Strategies?:
      The Internet was and is, an invention of academics, researchers, including the ones of the military phase. It is still the first anarchy in power (a limited but not negligible disuised power) with well known ancestrals in other fields and ideologies, like the Commune or, less in the anarchic field and more in the one of the economic cooperation in network, the Hanseatic League.
  7. The spirit of one's ancestor.
    • 1872, USA House of Representatives, House Documents - Volume 18; Volume 267, page 165:
      Is not that article of the treaty relating to Christianity which, in condemning the worship of ancestrals, places itself in direct opposition to the fundamental law of the empire, a most flagrant interference in the affairs of the Chinese?
    • 1960, Guy E. Swanson, The Birth of the Gods: The Origin of Primitive Beliefs, page 103:
      Only three of the 23 societies with such kinship groups lack active ancestrals. Half of the 24 societies without such kinship gropus posses active ancestral spirits.
    • 1999, Surinder Jit Singh Pall, The Masters & the Word Divine: Questions-answers, page 32:
      The Guru then asked them that if their water could reach the sun or their ancestrals as they used to believe, why could his water not reach Kartarpur, which was far nearer than the sun.
  8. One who follows, honors, or is attracted to an ancestral tradition.
    • 1928, Antiques: A Magazine for Collectors - Volumes 13-14, page 530:
      To future ancestrals living in old homesteads or in copies of them, Figures 2 and 3 indicate what and how to show.
    • 2011, Emily Boyd, Carl Folke, Adapting Institutions, page 62:
      The DC [District Commissioner] reasoned that since it was only the ancestrals who had a problem with the incident, they should supply the bulls necessary to purify the forest. The ancestrals refused, since they did not want to pay for an offence of the Christian group.
  9. (logic) A relationship in which something is a precursor.
    • 1992, Diane Brentari, Gary N. Larson, Lynn A. MacLeod, The Joy of Grammar: A festschrift in honor of James D. McCawley, page 309:
      Like all ordinary ancestrals, remote successor is logically reflexive.
    • 2004, Paul Martin Postal, Skeptical Linguistic Essays, page 61:
      One can take advantage of the ancestrals of basic relations such as RemoteSuccessor, to define Quace structure as follows internal to Proposal A:
    • 2010, Paul Martin Postal, Edge-based Clausal Syntax, page 32:
      I thus naturally extend the notation introduced for the ancestrals of structural relations between arcs to the nonstructural relations Sponsor and Erase, and to relations defined in terms of them like Successor.

References

Anagrams

Catalan

Pronunciation

Adjective

ancestral m or f (masculine and feminine plural ancestrals)

  1. ancestral
    Synonym: avial

Further reading

French

Etymology

Inherited from Old French ancestrel, from ancestre (ancestor), from Late Latin antecessor, an agent noun from the past participle stem of Latin antecedere (to proceed), from the prefix ante- with the infinitive cedere (to go), the latter from Proto-Italic *kezdō (to avoid or to go away), from Proto-Indo-European *ked- (to yield or to go).

Pronunciation

Adjective

ancestral (feminine ancestrale, masculine plural ancestraux, feminine plural ancestrales)

  1. ancestral
    • 1983, Les Maîtres de l'Univers:
      Par le pouvoir du crâne ancestral ! Je détiens la force toute-puissante !
      By the power of Grayskull! I have the power!
    • 1985, She-Ra, la princesse du pouvoir:
      Pour l’honneur du crâne ancestral ! Je suis She-Ra !
      For the honor of Grayskull! I am She-Ra!

Further reading

Portuguese

Etymology

From the Old French adjective ancestrel, from the noun ancestre (ancestor), from Late Latin antecessor (predecessor), an agent noun from the past participle stem of Latin antecedere (to proceed), from the prefix ante- with the infinitive cedere (to go), the former from Proto-Italic *kezdō (to avoid or to go away), from the Proto-Indo-European *ked- (to yield or to go).

Pronunciation

 
 

  • Rhymes: (Portugal) -al, (Brazil) -aw
  • Hyphenation: an‧ces‧tral

Adjective

ancestral m or f (plural ancestrais)

  1. ancestral (relating to ancestors)
  2. archaic (extremely old)
    Synonyms: arcaico, antigo

Derived terms

Noun

ancestral m or f by sense (plural ancestrais)

  1. ancestor; forefather (someone from whom a person is descended)
    Synonyms: progenitor, antepassado, ascendente, avoengo

Romanian

Etymology

Borrowed from French ancestral.

Adjective

ancestral m or n (feminine singular ancestrală, masculine plural ancestrali, feminine and neuter plural ancestrale)

  1. ancestral

Declension

singular plural
masculine neuter feminine masculine neuter feminine
nominative-
accusative
indefinite ancestral ancestrală ancestrali ancestrale
definite ancestralul ancestrala ancestralii ancestralele
genitive-
dative
indefinite ancestral ancestrale ancestrali ancestrale
definite ancestralului ancestralei ancestralilor ancestralelor

Spanish

Etymology

From the Old French ancestrel, from the noun ancestre (ancestor), from Late Latin antecessor (predecessor), an agent noun from the past participle stem of Latin antecedere (to proceed), from the prefix ante- with the infinitive cedere (to go), the latter from Proto-Italic *kezdō (to avoid or to go away), from the Proto-Indo-European *ked- (to yield or to go).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): (Spain) /anθesˈtɾal/
  • IPA(key): (Latin America, Philippines) /ansesˈtɾal/
  • Audio (Venezuela):(file)
  • Rhymes: -al
  • Syllabification: an‧ces‧tral

Adjective

ancestral m or f (masculine and feminine plural ancestrales)

  1. ancestral

Derived terms

Further reading