subcineritious
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From sub- + cineritious.
Adjective
[edit]subcineritious (not comparable)
- Of a somewhat ashen gray color.
- 1657, Tomlinson (translator), Jean de Renou, A Medicinal Dispensatory:
- [page 353:] Subcineritiously virid.
- [page 446:] Some of the domestick Ducks are all white, others all black, others like Piets, partly white, partly black; and others subcineritious, as all wilde ones are.
- [page 672:] Balm flows from a [...] Tree [...] of a subcineritious colour.
- 1670, H. Stubbe, Plus Ultra, page 130:
- A subcineritious or dirty-coloured putrilage.
- 1824, The Anatomy of the Brain, Adapted for the Use of Students, Etc, pages 92-93:
- The infundibulum is a cineritious or reddish coloured body, of a conical figure, situated between the union of the optic berves and the corpora condidantia; [...] It is described by Vieussens as a short subcineritious vessel, which [...]
- 1657, Tomlinson (translator), Jean de Renou, A Medicinal Dispensatory:
Further reading
[edit]- 1955 January 15, Joseph T. Shipley, Dictionary of Early English, Rowman & Littlefield, →ISBN, page 638:
- […] subcineritious (accent on the fourth syllable), baked under ashes. […]
- 1759, Nathan Bailey, An Universal Etymological English Dictionary:
- ... SUBCINERITIOUS [subcineritius, L.] baked under the Ashes.