adumbrate

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin adumbrātus (represented in outline), from adumbrāre (cast a shadow on), from umbra (shadow).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈædʌmˌbɹeɪt/

Verb

adumbrate (third-person singular simple present adumbrates, present participle adumbrating, simple past and past participle adumbrated)

  1. To foreshadow vaguely.
  2. To give a vague outline.
    • 1996, John M. Cooper, "Introduction" in Plato: Complete Works, Hackett, p. xxii:
      Accordingly, even though readers always and understandably speak of the theories adumbrated by Socrates here as "Plato's theories", one ought not to speak of them so without some compunction--the writing itself, and also Plato the author, present these always in a spirit of open-ended exploration, and sometimes there are contextual clues indicating that Socrates exaggerates or goes what the argument truly justifies, and so on.
  3. To obscure or overshadow.

Derived terms

Translations

Latin

Pronunciation

  • (Classical) IPA(key): /a.dumˈbraː.te/, [a.dʊmˈbraː.tɛ]

Verb

adumbrāte

  1. second-person plural present active imperative of adumbrō
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