monstrate

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English

Etymology

From Latin mōnstrāt-, mōnstrāre.[1]

Verb

monstrate (third-person singular simple present monstrates, present participle monstrating, simple past and past participle monstrated)

  1. (transitive, rare, literary) To show.
    • 1609, Alexander Gardyne, “The Contents and Summe of the Authors his Christian Knight Translated”, in A Garden of Graue and Godlie Flowres: Sonets, Elegies, and Epitaphs. , Edinburgh: Thomas Finlason, →OCLC, signature , verso:
      The Portrat right, the Type, the Figure true, / And very viue Anatomie of wit: / To monſtrate theſe, the Miſſes we commit.
    • 1647, Michael Hudson, “Of the due limitation of the Kings Power”, in The Divine Right of Government: 1. Naturall, and 2. Politique. More Particularly of Monarchie; the Onely Legitimate and Natural Spece of Politique Government. , : , via Early English Books Online 2, →OCLC, book II (Declaring the Divine Right of Monarchie), page 166:
      et he ought to punish all idolatrous formes of worship, because the light of nature is sufficient to monstrate the absurdnesse and impiety thereof; []
    • , London: E. Bell, J. Darby, , →OCLC, column 2:
      To MONSTRATE, [montrer, F[rench] monſtratum, L[atin]] to ſhew.]
    • 1937, David Jones, “Part 7: The five unmistakable marks”, in In Parenthesis: Seinnyessit e Gledyf ym Penn Mameu, London: Faber & Faber Ltd, published 1955, →OCLC, page 170:
      But the very young one / who walks apart / whose wide-lidded eyes monstrate immeasurable fatigue—his greatcoat fits superbly at the waist and its tailored skirts have distinction; []

References

  1. ^ monstrate, v.”, in OED Online Paid subscription required, Oxford: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.

Interlingua

Participle

monstrate

  1. past participle of monstrar

Latin

Participle

mōnstrāte

  1. vocative masculine singular of mōnstrātus