prosilient
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English
[edit]Adjective
[edit]prosilient (comparative more prosilient, superlative most prosilient)
- Eminent; prominent; distinguished above others.
- 1916, Gertrude Franklin Horn Atherton, The Conqueror, page 469:
- All travellers of distinction brought letters to Hamilton, for, not excepting Washington, he was to Europeans the most prosilient of Americans.
- 1928, Modern Music: A Quarterly Review - Volumes 6-9, page 21:
- The piano concerto mentioned as among the prosilient works of the year was that of Ernest Toch, his opus 54.
- 2007, Suresh Chandra Dwivedi, Shubha Dwivedi, Poet Dr. Mahendra Bhatnagar: His Mind and Art, page 1:
- Maheudra Bhatnagar : A Prosilient Poet of Optimism and Certitude
- obvious; salient; prominent; conspicuous.
- 1974, Indian Textile Industry Annual - Volume 35, page 33:
- The economic depression in the world sericulture industry became suddenly prosilient following the dramatic decision by Japan to call off imports altogether.
- 1980, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, George Whalley, H. J. Jackson, Marginalia - Volume 12, Part 4, page 67:
- Even granting what I hold extravagant, that the two Ev. Inf. can be conjured into compatibility — still the prima facie differences and seeming Contradictions are too many, too important, too prosilient not to have been noticed & explained by the Compiler.
- 2004, Carol A. Hess, Sacred Passions : The Life and Music of Manuel de Falla, →ISBN:
- It is difficult to make a death episode . . . without having previously brought the characters into more prosilient relief than those of the Shaw–de Falla opera.
Latin
[edit]Verb
[edit]prōsilient