teterrimous
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Latin teterrima (“most foul, most ugly”).[1]
Adjective
[edit]teterrimous (comparative more teterrimous, superlative most teterrimous)
- (rare) Extremely foul or ugly; horrible; terrible.
- 1854, Edward Michael Whitty, The Derbyites and the Coalition: Parliamentary Sketches, Trübner & Co, page 128:
- Captain Magan, the teterrimous occasion of the wars of the week, enters battle in a red shirt!
- 1885, The Royal River: The Thames, From Source to Sea, Gresham Books Limited, published 1983, →ISBN, page 194:
- Halliford Bridge was washed away some years ago by the floods; and now the Surrey and Middlesex shores are connected by a brick and iron structure which is named Walton Bridge, and which, being the teterrimous cause of war between Bumbledon on both sides the river, was painted of two colours, a chromatic difference that greatly increased the normal ugliness of the design.
References
[edit]- ^ J. Hanson, "Remedying a Teterrimous Situation: Catholic Phoenix Provides the Latin Text of Ineffabilis Deus", Catholic Phoenix, 7 December 2010