admirate
English
Etymology
Back-formation from admiration. Equivalent to admire + -ate.
Verb
admirate (third-person singular simple present admirates, present participle admirating, simple past and past participle admirated)
- (non-native speakers' English) To admire.
- 2000 February 14, schles...@my-deja.com, “Dr. Laura and Oprah”, in alt.radio.talk.dr-laura (Usenet), retrieved 2022-04-21:
- I admirate Oprah's capital gains, but as far as her moral life, well, she's a fat whore!
- 2000 July 24, Hugette.Lespine, “Croats, Serbs and Muslims”, in alt.fifty-plus.friends (Usenet), retrieved 2022-04-21:
- We are very admirating of him in France.
- 2004 April 13, dom's, “What's on the cd player”, in alt.music.led-zeppelin (Usenet), retrieved 2022-04-21:
- In fact, Miles went into jazz-rock-funk by deeply participating to create this musical movement end of 60s. So, during this period, he mixed influnces[sic] from Jimi Hendrix and Sly Stone in jazz and was admirating those musicians.
- 2010 June 21, Merciadri Luca, “Animated trees”, in comp.text.tex (Usenet), retrieved 2022-04-21:
- Yes, but that means that Robin's link is incorrect!
(But that does not prevent me from admirating Robin's actions for TeX stuff.)
Latin
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