floruit
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]- fl., flor. (abbreviation)
Etymology
[edit]Unadapted borrowing from Latin flōruit (“he/she/it flourished”), from flōreō (“bloom, flourish”), from flōs (“flower”).
Pronunciation
[edit]- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈflɔɹ(j)uɪt/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈflɔːɹʊɪt/, /ˈflɒɹʊɪt/
Verb
[edit]floruit
- (defective, rare except abbreviated) lived, used in biographies to indicate a time period during which a person is known to have been alive, when dates of birth and/or death are not known.
- 1895, Arthur Cayley Headlam, The Church Quarterly Review, page 155:
- Marius Mercator must have shared the vigour of Alcimus, for he floruit in 218 according to Mr. Miller , while he at any rate existed in 418.
- 1993 November 15, Joseph Cary, A Ghost in Trieste, University of Chicago Press, →ISBN, page 230:
- J. Joyce (floruit 1850)
In 1926 Svevo wrote a letter to James Joyce in Paris inquiring if he were related to the J. Joyce who in 1850 had had printed and published by Lloyd Austriaco in Trieste a book[...]
- 2003, Banāsā, Banasa: A Spiritual Autobiography, Otto Harrassowitz Verlag, →ISBN, page 86:
- Mīrā (Bai). Floruit 16th century. Rajasthan's most famous female saint and poetess of Kṛṣṇa bhakti.
Usage notes
[edit]- Almost always used abbreviated as fl.
- In translated Latin sources, the term implies the time period during the person's heyday or most productive years of life, rather than lifespan itself.
- The term is borrowed from Latin and no other conjugation is used in English.
Noun
[edit]floruit (plural floruits)
- The time period during which a person, group, culture, etc. is at its peak.
- Synonym: flowering
- 2005, James A. Arieti, Philosophy in the Ancient World[1], Rowman & Littlefield, →ISBN, page xxi:
- Though Aristotle claimed that a human being reaches his intellectual peak at age forty-nine (Rhetoric 1390b9), chronologists reckon a person's flowering—his floruit—at about age forty. The mists of time have made the precise reckoning of chronology quite difficult. Sometimes, when a birth is not known, a floruit can be estimated on the basis of what is known about an individual's career.
Translations
[edit]peak period of a person/culture/group
Latin
[edit]Verb
[edit]flōruit
- third-person singular perfect active indicative of flōreō ([he, she or it] flourished)
- (in post-Classical texts) was productive around the time of
Categories:
- English terms borrowed from Latin
- English unadapted borrowings from Latin
- English terms derived from Latin
- English 3-syllable words
- English terms with IPA pronunciation
- English non-lemma forms
- English verb forms
- English irregular simple past forms
- English terms with rare senses
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- English lemmas
- English nouns
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- en:Time
- English learned borrowings from Latin
- English defective verbs
- Latin non-lemma forms
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