latrate

English

Etymology

From Latin lātrātus (barked) taken as a verb via English -ate, from Latin lātrāre (to bark). Compare Spanish ladrar (to bark). First attested in 1623, originally seemingly as a ghost word.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /læˈtreɪt/, /ləˈtreɪt/, /leɪˈtreɪt/

Verb

latrate (third-person singular simple present latrates, present participle latrating, simple past and past participle latrated)

  1. (rare) To bark; to make doglike noises.
    • [1623, Henry Cockeram, The English Dictionarie Of 1623, New York: Huntington Press, published 1930, s.v., page 110:
      Latrate, to barke like a dog.]
    • 1928, Charles Hall Grandgent, Prunes and Prism: With Other Odds and Ends, page 145:
      I once saw a big dog plunging out furiously at a passing car, and, as I watched him, his gait looked peculiar. The reason for this eccentricity became clear when he returned from his latrating orgy: he had only three legs.
    • 1931, Harry Kemp, Love Among the Cape Enders, page 91:
      [] Rip ought to know there wasn’t a beggar’s chance of catching one of the birds; all the silly, latrating dogs thus showed off.
    • 1972, Max Wylie, 400 Miles from Harlem: Courts, Crime, and Correction, page 201:
      With everything boiling over; with everyone rapping, yakking or latrating, it would restore dignity to a number of America’s newspapers if the objectivity of their reporting would harden in direct proportion to the subjectivity of the story being reported.

References

Italian

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /laˈtra.te/
  • Rhymes: -ate
  • Hyphenation: la‧trà‧te

Verb

latrate

  1. inflection of latrare:
    1. second-person plural present indicative
    2. second-person plural imperative

Participle

latrate f pl

  1. feminine plural of latrato

Anagrams

Latin

Pronunciation

Participle

lātrāte

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