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adunc
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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English
Etymology
Pronunciation
Adjective
adunc (comparative more adunc, superlative most adunc)
- (usually of a nose) Curved inward, hooked.
- 1823, “On Vampyrism”, in The New Monthly Magazine, volume 5, page 142:
- There was altogether something repulsive to sympathy about this old Shylock; and whether or not from any involuntary associations connected with his known profession (which certainly of itself might entitle him to succeed to the distinction of the monks, whom Voltaire called the modern vampyres), or more, as we believe, from his red hollow cheeks, adunc nose, and small appetite for butchers' meat, we wrote this man down in our imagination a Vampyre.
- 1901, George Saintsbury, The earlier Renaissance, page 113:
- From Horace and Persius downward there have been two satiric manners - one that of the easy well-bred or would-be well-bred man of the world who suspends everything on the adunc nose and occasionally scratches with still more adunc claws; the other that of the indignant moralist reproving the corruptions of the time.
Related terms
Translations
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Romanian
Etymology
Adjective
adunc m or n (feminine singular aduncă, masculine plural adunci, feminine/neuter plural adunce)
Declension
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