mountant

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English

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Etymology

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mount +‎ -ant. Doublet of montant.

Adjective

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mountant (comparative more mountant, superlative most mountant)

  1. (archaic) Rising

Noun

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mountant (plural mountants)

  1. (microscopy) The medium used for mounting a slide
    • 2004, Cletus P. Kurzman, Jack W. Fell, “Yeasts”, in Biodiversity of Fungi[1], →ISBN, page 335:
      Both mountants can be placed on the same slide, with spores placed in each.
  2. (photography, dated) The adhesive used to affix a photograph to a mount
    • 1911, Bernard Edward Jones, Encyclopedia of Photography[2], reprint edition, published 1964, →ISBN, page 365:
      The favourite professional mountant was, and to some extent still is, starch paste.
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Middle English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Borrowed from Old French montant; equivalent to mounten +‎ -ant.

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ˈmuːntant/, /munˈtau̯nt/

Noun

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mountant (plural mountantes)

  1. (rare) A post or vertical beam.
  2. (rare, astrology) ascendant

Descendants

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  • English: montant

References

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