venatic
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Latin vēnāticus (“of or pertaining to hunting”), from vēnātus (“hunting, the chase”), from vēnor (“hunt, chase”).
Adjective
[edit]venatic (comparative more venatic, superlative most venatic)
- Of, pertaining to or involved in hunting.
- 1863, Cambrian Archaeological Association, Archaeologia cambrensis[1], page 72:
- […] consequently, Lost-withiel, as a compound name, would signify the tented encampment of the stranger, an epithet fairly applicable to the first settlers in that locality, who doubtless migrated thither over-sea, and like most venatic tribes without settled residence, dwelt in tents.
- 1856, Samuel Klinefelter Hoshour, Letters to Squire Pedant, in the East, page 13:
- Not gyved with connubial relations, I entered upon my migration entirely isolated, with the exception of a canine quadruped whose mordacious, latrant, lusorious, and venatic qualities, are without parity.
- 2008 [1899], Alexander Del Mar, The History of Money in America: From the Earliest Times to the Establishment of the Constitution[3], →ISBN, page 37:
- Races belonging to a scarcely lower civilization than the Aztecs, certainly far more advanced than the venatic tribes of the North and East, must have occupied at some remote time and for a lengthy period, a considerable portion of the Mississippi Basin
Synonyms
[edit]- (of or pertaining to hunting): venatorial