adumbrate
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Borrowed from Latin adumbrātus (“represented in outline”), from adumbrāre (“cast a shadow on”), from umbra (“shadow”).
Pronunciation
[edit]- IPA(key): /ˈædʌmˌbɹeɪt/
Audio (Southern England): (file)
Verb
[edit]adumbrate (third-person singular simple present adumbrates, present participle adumbrating, simple past and past participle adumbrated)
- To foreshadow vaguely.
- 1962 October, G. Freeman Allen, “The New Look in Scotland's Northern Division—II”, in Modern Railways, page 270:
- From track level, its operating floor looks particularly capacious, but there is a vacant space at one end which was designed to accommodate the control panel for the Perth-Inverness C.T.C. scheme; this was adumbrated as long ago as the 1955 Modernisation Plan, but now seems to be regarded as an unjustifiable luxury.
- 2020, Kristen Figgins, “The Integrity of Nature”, in Jonathan Elmore, editor, Fiction and the Sixth Mass Extinction, Rowman & Littlefield, →ISBN:
- This piece will perform a micro-excavation of these toplayers of the literary soil to suggest anxiogenic literature has the potential not only to adumbrate the post-apocalypse, a common theme in contemporary literature, but also to anticipate the post-Anthropocene.
- To give a vague outline.
- 1996, John M. Cooper, “Introduction”, in Plato: Complete Works, Hackett, page xxii:
- Accordingly, even though readers always and understandably speak of the theories adumbrated by Socrates here as "Plato's theories", one ought not to speak of them so without some compunction--the writing itself, and also Plato the author, present these always in a spirit of open-ended exploration, and sometimes there are contextual clues indicating that Socrates exaggerates or goes what the argument truly justifies, and so on.
- To obscure or overshadow.
Derived terms
[edit]Related terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]To foreshadow vaguely.
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To give a vague outline.
To obscure or overshadow.
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Latin
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): /a.dumˈbraː.te/, [äd̪ʊmˈbräːt̪ɛ]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /a.dumˈbra.te/, [äd̪umˈbräːt̪e]
Verb
[edit]adumbrāte
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