hereticate
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Latin haereticatus, past participle of haereticare.
Verb
[edit]hereticate (third-person singular simple present hereticates, present participle hereticating, simple past and past participle hereticated)
- (transitive) To denounce as heresy or a heretic.
- 1873, Fitzedward Hall, Modern English:
- And let no one be minded, on the score of my neoterism, to hereticate me.
- c. 1629, Joseph Hall, Answer to Pope Urban his inurbanity expressed, in a brief against the Protestants of France:
- If that great Chancellor of Paris were now alive, he would freely teach his Sorbonne, as he once did, that it is not in the Pope's power, that I may use his own word, to hereticate any proposition.