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eccentricate. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
eccentricate, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
eccentricate in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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English
Etymology
From eccentric + -ate (verb-forming suffix).
Verb
eccentricate (third-person singular simple present eccentricates, present participle eccentricating, simple past and past participle eccentricated)
- (transitive) To move to the periphery; to marginalize.
- 1783, John Young, A Criticism on the Elegy, or 1789, Robert Potter, The Art of Criticism:
- Gray owes much to scowering, as does Virgil to wire-drawn epithets; whilst Milton cramps with hard words and eccentricates by transposition,
1803, Thomas Pownall, Memorial addressed to the Sovereigns of Europe and the Atlantic:[...] have, by the intrigues of an ignorant, presumptuous, speculating faction, been absorbed in the vortex of the great continental power; have been eccentricated from their former orbit, and must now perform their future [...]
1891, Daniel Kinnear Clark, The Steam Engine, page 339:All the fire-bars are movable; they are supported at their outer ends on a transverse shaft, called "the eccentricated shaft," a shaft formed of a series of cranks or eccentrics [...] The motion of the eccentricated shaft is derived from a cone-pulley of three speeds.
1989, Julian B. Barbour, Absolute Or Relative Motion?, volume 1, page 300:It was, he asserted, simply asking too much of human credibility to deny that all these identical equantized, and eccentricated, and perfectly phased epicycles did not have a common origin - either in the motion of the earth around the sun or the sun around the earth.