maculate

English

Etymology

Latin maculātus, past participle of maculāre (to spot).

Verb

maculate (third-person singular simple present maculates, present participle maculating, simple past and past participle maculated)

  1. To spot; to stain; to blur.

Translations

Adjective

maculate (comparative more maculate, superlative most maculate)

  1. Marked with spots or maculae; blotched.
  2. Defiled; impure.
    • 1998 May 25, The New Republic:
      [Les Misérables is] about the struggle of a mistreated man as he rises to the top, along with a mortal conflict between this maculate virtuous man and an immaculate pursuing demon.

Translations

References

Italian

Adjective

maculate

  1. feminine plural of maculato

Anagrams

Latin

Participle

maculāte

  1. vocative masculine singular of maculātus

Spanish

Verb

maculate

  1. second-person singular voseo imperative of macular combined with te
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