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polverine. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
polverine, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
polverine in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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English
Etymology
From Italian polverino, from Latin pulvis (“dust”).
Noun
polverine (countable and uncountable, plural polverines)
- (uncountable) Glassmaker's ashes; a kind of potash or pearlash, brought from the Levant and Syria, used in the manufacture of fine glass.
- (countable) A tiny biting insect found in South America.
1946, Kenneth Walker, I talk of dreams: an experiment in autobiography, page 145:Mosquitoes and polverines, little midges so small as to be scarcely visible, rose in a cloud from the water and settled on our hands and faces.
1980, David Attenborough, The Zoo Quest Expeditions: Travels in Guyana, Indonesia, and Paraguay, →ISBN:The polverines, however, were so small and numerous that even though we massacred fifty with a slap it seemed to make no difference to the hazy black cloud which hung around our heads.
1991, MS Aufdemberge, The Mission Efforts of the Slovak Evangelical Lutheran Synod in the Chaco Province of Argentina:But all were more tolerable than those polverines.
References
Italian
Noun
polverine f
- plural of polverina
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