exuvium
English
Etymology
Perhaps from Latin exuvium, or perhaps an independent back-formation from exuvia, under the impression that exuvia is the plural of a Latin second-declension neuter noun exuvium, whereas exuvia is in reality the regularised first-declension singular of Latin exuviae.
Noun
exuvium (plural exuvia or exuviums)
- (biology) Synonym of exuviae
- 1654 Simeon Ashe
- Loe here th' exuvium of that heavenly soul,
Who living did by's words and works controule
The power of Sin and Satan ; and whose breath
Redeem'd poor souls from darkness, and from death,
And by bis pious Doctrine did convince
The sly Temptations of that ayery Prince.
- Loe here th' exuvium of that heavenly soul,
- 1671 Basil Valentinus, monke of the order of St Bennet: The last will and testament
- Things inclining to ashes, and soot, and excrements of metals, and the exuviums or mulls of bodies Melters suppose may be taken and gotten off safely in a roasting or calcining fire, they make a great fire of wood under them, roast or calcine the metal...
...
Of ‘’Ignis candens’’, or of the glowing fire
This fire is purposely ordered upon metalline bodies, it consumeth them, being their matter is naturally inclined thereunto: This fire is of great concernment, making their bodies very malleable, their exuvium’s stay on the Float, and is the best quality they have, that they put off in that glowing the thing which will be gone, and the good thereof remains.
- Things inclining to ashes, and soot, and excrements of metals, and the exuviums or mulls of bodies Melters suppose may be taken and gotten off safely in a roasting or calcining fire, they make a great fire of wood under them, roast or calcine the metal...
- 1679 Sir Thomas Browne in a letter to his son Edward
- I have sent you by Mrs. Alice Peirce, a skinne of the palme of a woemans hand, cast of at the end of a fever, or in the declination thereof; I called it exuvium palmæ muliebris, the Latin word being exuvia in the plurall, butt I named it exuvium, or exuvia in the singular number.
- 1860 John Harper "Glimpses of Ocean Life:
- 1939 Paul Random Henson et al.: US Dept. of Agriculture. Technical Bulletin 715 Alfalfa Experiments at Stoneville, Miss.
- 2012 David Rosen, P. DeBach: Species of Aphytis of the World
- The cephalic exuvium, including the antennal cases, and the thoracic exuvium, including the leg and wing cases, are rather strongly sclerotized and are usually recognizable after emergence ...
- 1654 Simeon Ashe
Latin
Etymology
Perhaps an alternative form of, or parallel formation from, exuviae.
Noun
exuvium n (genitive exuviī); second declension
- Synonym of exuviae
- Erasmus, Adagia :
- Si leonis exuvium non sufficit, adde vulpinum.
- If the skin of a lion does not suffice, sew on that of a fox.
- Si leonis exuvium non sufficit, adde vulpinum.
- 1752, Robert Ainsworth, Thesaurus Linguae Latinae Compendiarius:
- "The casting of a deer's head, Cornuum cervinorum exuvium
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
Declension
Second-declension noun (neuter).
Case | Singular | Plural |
---|---|---|
Nominative | exuvium | exuvia |
Genitive | exuviī | exuviōrum |
Dative | exuviō | exuviīs |
Accusative | exuvium | exuvia |
Ablative | exuviō | exuviīs |
Vocative | exuvium | exuvia |
References
- exuvium in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
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