pavonine
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Latin pāvōnīnus, from pāvō (“peacock”).
Pronunciation
[edit]Adjective
[edit]pavonine (comparative more pavonine, superlative most pavonine)
- Of or pertaining to the genus Pavo or its family Pavonidae, including the peafowl.
- Possessing the coloring or iridescence of a peacock feather.
- 1817, Anne Plumptre, Narrative of a Residence in Ireland During the Summer of 1814, and that of 1815, page 184:
- These rocks are a schist, and abound with the copper pyrites, which occasionally exhibits a pavonine tarnish. The schist is sometimes of a very deep gray colour, and is then the most rich in metal; sometimes also it has the green […]
- 1878, Sir Richard Francis Burton, The Gold-mines of Midian and the Ruined Midianite Cities: A Fortnight's Tour in North-western Arabia, page 218:
- It resembled from a distance porphyry, while much of it had a pavonine lustre, like the argentiferous galena of the Silver States in North America. The great weight suggested one mass of metal, and part of it had evidently been […]
- 1883, Geological Survey of India. Museum, Frederick Richard Mallet, A Descriptive Catalogue of the Collections of Minerals in the Geological Museum, Calcutta, page 42:
- 362. Massive BORNITE, having a pavonine purple tarnish; with dolomite. Kenmare mine, Co. Kerry, Ireland. 363. Massive BORNITE, having a pavonine purple tarnish; with malachite and ochre.
- 1921, American Museum of Natural History, Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, page 191:
- In D. kahli the blue of the wings on the upper side is deep pavonine blue, or intense cobalt, confined on the anterior wing to a broad patch above the lower margin near the lower angle, and not invading the cell; […]
- Showy, like a peacock's tail; exhibiting vanity.
- 1864, William Rounseville Alger, A Critical History of the Doctrine of a Future Life: With a Complete Bibliography of the Subject, page 479:
- ... leaving its present body would find or construct another according to its chief intrinsic qualities and forces, whether those were a leonine magnanimity of courage, a vulpine subtlety of cunning, or a pavonine strut of vanity .
- 1901, John Macmillan Brown, Riallaro: The Archipelago of Exiles, page 223:
- He had me all to himself; whilst his wife abased herself before my companion, he made up for the abasement by a truly pavonine strut and spread of his feathers. Amongst the few items of fact that floated on the torrent of his [lecture were...]
- 2021 December 14, Anthony Ossa-Richardson, A History of Ambiguity, Princeton University Press, →ISBN:
- A list of acknowledgements can be a pavonine affair, an excuse more to flaunt than to thank. I have tried to avoid that here. But I must thank my excellent colleagues at QMUL, […]
Translations
[edit]of or pertaining to the genus Pavo
possessing the coloring or iridescence of a peacock feather
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Noun
[edit]pavonine (uncountable)
- Tarnish found on some ores and metals which resembles the tail feathers of a peacock.
- Any bird from the family Pavonidae.
Further reading
[edit]- “pavonine”, in The Century Dictionary […], New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911, →OCLC.
- 2022 October 14, Peter Isaacs, The Dictionary of Colors and Colored Words, Peter M. Isaacs, →ISBN:
- pavonine adj. like or resembling a peacock's tail in color, design, or iridescence; of or having the colour of a peacock's tail
Latin
[edit]Adjective
[edit]pāvōnīne