adjectitious
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin adiectīcius.
Adjective
adjectitious (not comparable)
- (formal) Added; additional.
- a 1799, John Parkhurst, A Hebrew and English lexicon without points, page 25
- An adjective, so called because adjectitious, or added to a substantive, denotes some quality or accident of the substantive to which it is joined […]
- 1827, Jeremy Bentham, Rationale of Judicial Evidence: Specially Applied to English Practice: in Five Volumes, volume 2, page 484:
- Circumstances by which the obligations and rights, as well principal and essential as adjectitious, established by the species of contract in question, are respectively made to cease.
- 1870, A. C. Bradley, E. C. Benedict, “Insurance Company v. The Treasurer”, in United States Reports: Cases Adjudged in the Supreme Court, volume 78, page 207:
- Such matter is ordinarily either omitted or else inserted in the preamble; but it has here crept on to the end of a section, and appears as an adjectitious thought. It has no effect there which it would not have had if it had been inserted in a preamble or omitted altogether.
- a 1799, John Parkhurst, A Hebrew and English lexicon without points, page 25
Derived terms
See also
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