rabiate
Appearance
English
[edit]Adjective
[edit]rabiate (not comparable)
- (rare) rabid; affected with rabies
- 1856, George Raymond, Drafts for Acceptance:
- Most men are rabiate on some subject; but the stricken of poetry, is a seraphic malady.
- 2014, Floris Overduin, Nicander of Colophon's Theriaca: A Literary Commentary, page 132:
- Doubtlessly inspired by Nicander he, or rather someone else whose work is transmitted under his name, wrote a Theriaca (Περί ίοβόλων, έν ὧ χαί περί λυσσόντοςχυνός, 'On poison-injecting animals, including rabiate dogs') and an Alexipharmaca,,,
- 2019, Aynur Simsek, Hasan Icen, Metin Gurcay, Akin Kochan, Ozgur Yasar Celik, “Spatial Distribution of Rabies in Wild Animals in East and Southeast Anatolia Regions of Turkey, 2010-2015”, in IOSR Journal of Agriculture and Veterinary Science, volume 12, issue 1, series II, page 52:
- The virus enters the body as the rabiate animal bites the organism and moves through the neurons towards the central nervous system with a preference for the cerebrum and the cerebellum (centripedal [sic] involvement), and from here they move through the peripheral nerves to infect the salivary glands and other end organs.
German
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Audio: (file)
Adjective
[edit]rabiate
- inflection of rabiat:
Spanish
[edit]Verb
[edit]rabiate
- second-person singular voseo imperative of rabiar combined with te