depasture

English

Etymology

de- + pasture.

Pronunciation

  • Hyphenation: de‧pas‧ture

Verb

depasture (third-person singular simple present depastures, present participle depasturing, simple past and past participle depastured)

  1. (archaic) To eat up, consume; to strip.
    • 1600, Edward Fairfax, The Jerusalem Delivered of Tasso, XIII, lxxix:
      Earth like the patient was whose lively blood / Hath overcome at last some sickness strong, / Whose feeble limbs had been the bait and food / Whereon his strange disease depastur'd long.
  2. (archaic) To feed or pasture; to graze.
    • The New Sporting Magazine (volume 18, page 184)
      The butter, rich and yellow as the gowaned bank on which the milky mother has depastured, is probably taken directly from the churn.
    • 1824, Humphry W[illiam] Woolrych, “Of Pleading Rights of Common, etc.”, in A Treatise on the Law of Rights of Common, London: Joseph Butterworth and Son, law booksellers, 43, Fleet Street, →OCLC, page 278:
      The defendant's tort-feasance is now set forth with the damage, and the plaintiff says, that the defendant with an intention to injure him in the enjoyment of his commonable estate, during the time of his being so entitled to his common, wrongfully put and depastured several cattle on the waste there, in consequence of which, he has been unable to make use of his commonable profits in as ample and beneficial a manner as he otherwise might.

Anagrams

Latin

Participle

dēpāstūre

  1. vocative masculine singular of dēpāstūrus
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