<span class="searchmatch">oculated</span> From Latin oculātus, from oculus (“eye”). <span class="searchmatch">oculate</span> (comparative more <span class="searchmatch">oculate</span>, superlative most <span class="searchmatch">oculate</span>) (archaic) having eyes (archaic) having...
<span class="searchmatch">oculated</span> (comparative more <span class="searchmatch">oculated</span>, superlative most <span class="searchmatch">oculated</span>) Synonym of <span class="searchmatch">oculate</span>....
See also: cautelo and cauteló cautelò third-person singular past historic of cautelare <span class="searchmatch">oculate</span>...
oculado (feminine oculada, masculine plural oculados, feminine plural oculadas) <span class="searchmatch">oculate</span>...
From bin- + <span class="searchmatch">oculate</span>. binoculate (not comparable) Having two eyes. “binoculate”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. &...
From tri- + <span class="searchmatch">oculate</span>. trioculate (not comparable) (biology) Having, or appearing to have, three eyes binoculate monoculate triculate trinocular...
cau‧tè‧lo cautelo first-person singular present indicative of cautelare <span class="searchmatch">oculate</span> cautelo first-person singular present indicative of cautelar cautelo first-person...
o‧cu‧là‧to oculato (feminine oculata, masculine plural oculati, feminine plural <span class="searchmatch">oculate</span>) cautious, prudent shrewd prudente avveduto lungimirante assennato circospetto...
oculāris oculāriter oculārius oculeus oculitus oculō oculus → English: <span class="searchmatch">oculate</span> → Italian: oculato “oculatus”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879)...
súil-lia súilaibí (“keen-eyed, observant”) súilaithne súileach (“eyed, <span class="searchmatch">oculate</span>; eye-like”) súileog (“(little) bubble, globule, bead; ocellus”) súilfhéachaint...