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pavonine. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
pavonine, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
pavonine in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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English
Etymology
From Latin pāvōnīnus, from pāvō (“peacock”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈpævəˌnaɪn/, /-nɪn/
Adjective
pavonine (comparative more pavonine, superlative most pavonine)
- Of or pertaining to the genus Pavo or its family Pavonidae, including the peafowl.
- Possessing the coloring or iridescence of a peacock feather.
1817, Anne Plumptre, Narrative of a Residence in Ireland During the Summer of 1814, and that of 1815, page 184:These rocks are a schist, and abound with the copper pyrites, which occasionally exhibits a pavonine tarnish. The schist is sometimes of a very deep gray colour, and is then the most rich in metal; sometimes also it has the green […]
1878, Sir Richard Francis Burton, The Gold-mines of Midian and the Ruined Midianite Cities: A Fortnight's Tour in North-western Arabia, page 218:It resembled from a distance porphyry, while much of it had a pavonine lustre, like the argentiferous galena of the Silver States in North America. The great weight suggested one mass of metal, and part of it had evidently been […]
1883, Geological Survey of India. Museum, Frederick Richard Mallet, A Descriptive Catalogue of the Collections of Minerals in the Geological Museum, Calcutta, page 42:362. Massive BORNITE, having a pavonine purple tarnish; with dolomite. Kenmare mine, Co. Kerry, Ireland. 363. Massive BORNITE, having a pavonine purple tarnish; with malachite and ochre.
1921, American Museum of Natural History, Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, page 191:In D. kahli the blue of the wings on the upper side is deep pavonine blue, or intense cobalt, confined on the anterior wing to a broad patch above the lower margin near the lower angle, and not invading the cell; […]
- Showy, like a peacock's tail; exhibiting vanity.
1864, William Rounseville Alger, A Critical History of the Doctrine of a Future Life: With a Complete Bibliography of the Subject, page 479:... leaving its present body would find or construct another according to its chief intrinsic qualities and forces, whether those were a leonine magnanimity of courage, a vulpine subtlety of cunning, or a pavonine strut of vanity .
1901, John Macmillan Brown, Riallaro: The Archipelago of Exiles, page 223:He had me all to himself; whilst his wife abased herself before my companion, he made up for the abasement by a truly pavonine strut and spread of his feathers. Amongst the few items of fact that floated on the torrent of his [lecture were...]
2021 December 14, Anthony Ossa-Richardson, A History of Ambiguity, Princeton University Press, →ISBN:A list of acknowledgements can be a pavonine affair, an excuse more to flaunt than to thank. I have tried to avoid that here. But I must thank my excellent colleagues at QMUL, […]
Translations
of or pertaining to the genus Pavo
possessing the coloring or iridescence of a peacock feather
Noun
pavonine (uncountable)
- Tarnish found on some ores and metals which resembles the tail feathers of a peacock.
- Any bird from the family Pavonidae.
Further reading
- “pavonine”, in The Century Dictionary , New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911, →OCLC.
2022 October 14, Peter Isaacs, The Dictionary of Colors and Colored Words, Peter M. Isaacs, →ISBN:pavonine adj. like or resembling a peacock's tail in color, design, or iridescence; of or having the colour of a peacock's tail
Latin
Adjective
pāvōnīne
- vocative masculine singular of pāvōnīnus