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Showing results for digitate. Search instead for digitare.

digitate

American  
[dij-i-teyt] / ˈdɪdʒ ɪˌteɪt /
Also digitated

adjective

  1. Zoology. having digits or digitlike processes.

  2. Botany. having radiating divisions or leaflets resembling the fingers of a hand.

  3. like a digit or finger.


digitate British  
/ ˈdɪdʒɪˌteɪt /

adjective

  1. (of compound leaves) having the leaflets in the form of a spread hand

  2. (of animals) having digits or corresponding parts

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Other Word Forms

  • digitately adverb
  • digitation noun
  • multidigitate adjective
  • undigitated adjective

Etymology

Origin of digitate

Fisrt recorded in 1655–65; from Latin digitātus; digit, -ate 1

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Embryo simply curved.—A tall roughish annual, with digitate leaves of 5–7 linear-lanceolate coarsely toothed leaflets, the upper alternate; the inner bark of very tough fibres.

From Project Gutenberg

Tracing the widening female duct onwards we now come to the openings of the digitate accessory glands d, d, which probably assist in the formation of the egg-capsule.

From Project Gutenberg

The sponge is either devoid of branches or produces irregular, compressed, and often digitate processes, sometimes of considerable length and delicacy.

From Project Gutenberg

The other treatises, on the viviparous and oviparous digitate quadrupeds, on serpents, monsters, and minerals, were prepared for the press by Bartholomew Ambrosinus, another of his successors, and that on trees by Ovid Montalbanus.

From Project Gutenberg

The corallum of Heliopora is of a blue colour, and has the form of broad, upright, lobed, or digitate masses flattened from side to side.

From Project Gutenberg