cadaverate
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Latin cadāver + -ate.[1]
Verb
[edit]cadaverate (third-person singular simple present cadaverates, present participle cadaverating, simple past and past participle cadaverated)
- (rare, obsolete) To make lifeless; to reduce to dead matter.
- 1658, George Starkey, Natures explication and Helmont's vindication, section III:
- [Excrementa] […] which […] are by the heat of the body cadaverated, and cast forth.
- 1792, Thomas Holcroft, Anna St. Ives, vol. V, letter 85:
- Could lovers […] , with the wretched selfish jealousy of a modern marriage-maker, seek to cadaverate affection and to pervert each other into a utensil, a commodity, a thing appropriate to self and liable with other lumber to be cast aside?
References
[edit]- ^ James A. H. Murray et al., editors (1884–1928), “Cada·verate, v.”, in A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles (Oxford English Dictionary), volume II (C), London: Clarendon Press, →OCLC, page 12, column 2.