intermittent
English
Etymology
From Middle French intermittent, from Latin intermittens (“sending between”), from prefix inter- (“among, on”) + mittens (“sending”), from mittere (“to send”).
Adjective
intermittent (comparative more intermittent, superlative most intermittent)
- Stopping and starting, occurring, or presenting at intervals; coming after a particular time span.
- Synonyms: periodic, periodical, patchy, spasmodic; see also Thesaurus:discontinuous
- Antonyms: steady, constant, continual
- The day was cloudy with intermittent rain.
- Intermittent bugs are most difficult to reproduce.
- 1698, Robert South, Twelve Sermons upon Several Subjects and Occasions, volume 3, London: Thomas Bennet, page 511:
- […] the Gift of Prophecy […] was in the mind not as an Inhabitant, but as a Guest; that is, by intermittent Returns and Ecstasies, by Occasional Raptures and Revelations; as is clear from what we read of the Prophets in the Old Testament.
- 1792, Richard Cumberland, Calvary: or The Death of Christ, London: C. Dilly, Book 5, lines 364-366, p. 164:
- […] Pale through night’s curtain gleam’d
By fits the lunar intermittent ray,
That quiv’ring serv’d to light his lonely steps
- 1926, Hope Mirrlees, chapter 20, in Lud-in-the-Mist, London: Millenium, published 2000, page 193:
- […] by degrees the talk became as flickering and intermittent as the light of the dying fire, which they were too idle to feed with sticks […]
- 2015, John Irving, chapter 18, in Avenue of Mysteries, New York: Simon and Schuster, page 238:
- […] three scruffy-looking young men with intermittent facial hair and starvation-symptom physiques.
- (specifically, geology, of a body of water) Existing only for certain seasons; that is, being dry for part of the year.
- The area has many intermittent lakes and streams.
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
stopping and starting at intervals
|
geology: being dry for part of the year
|
Noun
intermittent (plural intermittents)
- (medicine, dated) An intermittent fever or disease.
- 1592, Nicholas Gyer, chapter 16, in The English Phlebotomy: or, Method and Way of Healing by Letting of Blood, London: Andrew Mansell, page 172:
- Feuers, and especially those that are called intermittents, discontinuing agues, euen naturally at the beginning and their first inuasion, cause vomits: and at the declining, sweats.
- 1733, John Arbuthnot, chapter 6, in An Essay concerning the Effects of Air on Human Bodies, London: J. Tonson, page 144:
- The Bark, which had been ineffectual in the Intermittents of the former Year, was successful in this.
- 1832, Robley Dunglison, “Circulation”, in Human Physiology, volume 2, Philadelphia: Carey & Lea, page 146:
- In disease, the agency of this system of vessels is an object of attentive study with the pathologist. To its influence in inflammation, we have already alluded; but it is no less exemplified in the more general diseases of the frame, as in the cold, hot, and sweating stages of an intermittent.
French
Etymology
From Latin intermittentem.
Pronunciation
Audio (CAN) (file)
Adjective
intermittent (feminine intermittente, masculine plural intermittents, feminine plural intermittentes)
Derived terms
Further reading
- “intermittent”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Latin
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.