polverine
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Italian polverino, from Latin pulvis (“dust”).
Noun
[edit]polverine (countable and uncountable, plural polverines)
- (uncountable) Glassmaker's ashes; a kind of potash or pearlash, brought from the Levant and Syria, used in the manufacture of fine glass.
- (countable) A tiny biting insect found in South America.
- 1946, Kenneth Walker, I talk of dreams: an experiment in autobiography, page 145:
- Mosquitoes and polverines, little midges so small as to be scarcely visible, rose in a cloud from the water and settled on our hands and faces.
- 1980, David Attenborough, The Zoo Quest Expeditions: Travels in Guyana, Indonesia, and Paraguay, →ISBN:
- The polverines, however, were so small and numerous that even though we massacred fifty with a slap it seemed to make no difference to the hazy black cloud which hung around our heads.
- 1991, MS Aufdemberge, The Mission Efforts of the Slovak Evangelical Lutheran Synod in the Chaco Province of Argentina:
- But all were more tolerable than those polverines.
References
[edit]- “polverine”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.
Italian
[edit]Noun
[edit]polverine f