innutritive
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]innutritive (comparative more innutritive, superlative most innutritive)
- (archaic) Lacking in nutrition.
- 1820, [Charles Robert Maturin], Melmoth the Wanderer: A Tale. […], volume I, Edinburgh: […] Archibald Constable and Company, and Hurst, Robinson, and Co., […], →OCLC, page 302:
- Others indulge themselves in perpetual reverie. They walk alone in the cloister,—in the garden. They feed themselves with the poison of delicious, innutritive illusion.
- 1859-1861, Mrs. Isabella Beeton, The Book of Household Management[1]:
- The other principle--the innutritive portion--passes from the intestines, and is thus got rid of.
- 1903, Herbert Spencer, Essays on Education and Kindred Subjects[2]:
- In a cow, subsisting on so innutritive a food as grass, we see that the immense quantity required necessitates an enormous digestive system; that the limbs, small in comparison with the body, are burdened by its weight; that in carrying about this heavy body and digesting this excessive quantity of food, much force is expended; and that, having but little remaining, the creature is sluggish.