incubatory

English

Adjective

incubatory (not comparable)

  1. Serving for or pertaining to incubation.
    Synonym: incubative
    • 1922, Report of the Danish Biological Station, page 34:
      The measurement investigations show furthermore that some of the wintered gammarid females commenced to get eggs in their incubatory pouches at about the end of January.
    • 2005, D.R. Khanna, Biology of Echinodermata, page 152:
      Two incubatory pockets in the body wall also occur in Cucumaria coatsi.
    • 2016, Sergey Minov, “The therapy for grief and the practice of incubation in early medieval Palestine”, in Brouria Bitton-Ashkelony, Derek Krueger, editors, Prayer and Worship in Eastern Christianities, 5th to 11th Centuries, page 220:
      Incubatory medicine was popular in the Greco-Roman world, the most famous example being the sanctuary of Asclepius at Epidauros in southern Greece, which attracted many pilgrims seeking healing.

Noun

incubatory (plural incubatories)

  1. A building where eggs are incubated.
    • 1888 February, “An Egyptian Incubatory”, in The Southern Cultivator and Industrial Journal, volume 46, number 2, page 58:
      As already stated, the incubatory is constructed of sun-dried bricks, mortar and earth.
    • 1890, United States. Bureau of Foreign Commerce, Commercial Relations of the United States, page 504:
      Eggs are bought for the incubatory at never exceeding 5 cents per dozen, and chicks just from the shell are sold at less than 15 cents per dozen.

References

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.